Fourth Wing: Chapter 3
Fourth Wing (The Empyrean Book 1)
Blue dragons descend from the extraordinary Gormfaileas line. Known for their formidable size, they are the most ruthless, especially in the case of the rare Blue Daggertail, whose knifelike spikes at the tip of their tail can disembowel an enemy with one flick.
âColonel Kaoriâs Field Guide to Dragonkind If Jack wants to kill me, he needs to get in line. Besides, I have a feeling Xaden Riorson is going to beat him to it.
âNot today,â I respond to Jack, the hilt of my dagger solid in my hand, and I somehow manage to suppress a shudder as he leans over and breathes in. Heâs scenting me like a fucking dog. Then he scoffs and walks off into the crowd of celebrating cadets and riders thatâs gathered in the sizable courtyard of the citadel.
Itâs still early, probably around nine, but already I see there arenât as many cadets as there were candidates ahead of me in line. Based on the overwhelming presence of leather, both the second- and third-years are here as well, taking stock of the new cadets.
The rain eases into a drizzle, as if it had only come to make the hardest test of my life even harderâ¦but I did it.
Iâm alive.
I made it.
My body begins to tremble, and a throbbing pain erupts in my left kneeâthe one I slammed on the parapet. I take a step, and it threatens to give out on me. I need to bind it before anyone notices.
âI think you made an enemy there,â the redhead says, casually shifting the lethal crossbow she wears strapped along her shoulder. She glances at me over the scroll with a shrewd look in her hazel eyes as she looks me up and down. âIâd watch your back with that one if I were you.â
I nod. Iâm going to have to watch my back and every other part of my body.
The next candidate approaches from the parapet as someone grips my shoulders from behind and spins me.
My dagger is halfway up when I realize itâs Rhiannon.
âWe made it!â She grins, giving my shoulders a squeeze.
âWe made it,â I repeat with a forced smile. My thighs are shaking now, but I manage to sheath my dagger at my ribs. Now that weâre here, both cadets, can I trust her?
âI canât thank you enough. There were at least three times I would have fallen off if you hadnât helped me. You were rightâthose soles were slick as shit. Have you seen the people around here? I swear I just saw a second-year with pink streaks in her hair, and one guy has dragon scales tattooed up his entire biceps.â
âConformity is for the infantry,â I say as she loops her arm through mine and tugs me along toward the crowd. My knee screams, pain radiating up to my hip and down to my foot, and I limp, my weight falling into Rhiannonâs side.
Damn it.
Where did this nausea come from? Why canât I stop shaking? Iâm going to fall any second nowâthereâs no way my body can remain upright with this earthquake in my legs or the whirring in my head.
âSpeaking of which,â she says, glancing down. âWe need to trade boots. Thereâs a benchââ
A tall figure in a pristine black uniform steps out of the crowd, charging toward us, and though Rhiannon manages to dodge, I stumble smack into his chest.
âViolet?â Strong hands catch my elbows to steady me, and I look up into a pair of familiar, striking brown eyes, flared wide in obvious shock.
Relief sweeps through me, and I try to smile, but it probably comes out like a distorted grimace. He seems taller than he was last summer, the beard that cuts across his jaw is new, and heâs filled out in a way that makes me blinkâ¦or maybe thatâs just my vision going hazy at the edges. The beautiful, easygoing smile thatâs starred in way too many of my fantasies is far from the scowl that purses his mouth, and everything about him seems a littleâ¦harder, but it works for him. The line of his chin, the set of his brow, even the muscles of his biceps are rigid under my fingers as I try to find my balance. Sometime in the last year, Dain Aetos went from attractive and cute to gorgeous.
And Iâm about to be sick all over his boots.
âWhat the hell are you doing here?â he barks, the shock in his eyes transforming to something foreign, something deadly. This isnât the same boy I grew up with. Heâs a second-year rider now.
âDain. Itâs good to see you.â Thatâs an understatement, but the trembles turn to full-on shakes, and bile creeps up my throat, dizziness only making the nausea worse. My knees give out.
âDamn it, Violet,â he mutters, hauling me back to my feet. With one hand on my back and the other under my elbow, he quickly guides me away from the crowd and into an alcove in the wall, close to the first defensive turret of the citadel. Itâs a shady, hidden spot with a hard wooden bench, which he sits me on, then helps me out of my rucksack.
Spit floods my mouth. âIâm going to be sick.â
âHead between your knees,â Dain orders in a harsh tone Iâm not used to from him, but I do it. He rubs circles on my lower back as I breathe in through my nose and out through my mouth. âItâs the adrenaline. Give it a minute and itâll pass.â I hear approaching footsteps on the gravel. âWho the hell are you?â
âIâm Rhiannon. Iâm Violetâsâ¦friend.â
I stare at the gravel under my mismatched boots and will the meager contents of my stomach to stay put.
âListen to me, Rhiannon. Violet is fine,â he commands. âAnd if anyone asks, then you tell them exactly what I said, that itâs just the adrenaline working out of her system. Understand?â
âItâs no oneâs business whatâs going on with Violet,â she retorts, her tone just as sharp as his. âSo I wouldnât say shit. Especially not when sheâs the reason I made it across the parapet.â
âYouâd better mean that,â he warns, the bite in his voice at odds with the ceaseless, comforting circles he makes on my back.
âI could ask you just who the hell you are,â she retorts.
âHeâs one of my oldest friends.â The trembles slowly subside, and the nausea wanes, but Iâm not sure if itâs from timing or my position, so I keep my head between my knees while I manage to unlace my left boot.
âOh,â Rhiannon answers.
âAnd a second-year rider, cadet,â he growls.
Gravel crunches, like Rhiannon has backed up a step.
âNo one can see you here, Vi, so take your time,â Dain says softly.
âBecause puking my guts up after surviving the parapet and the asshole who wanted to throw me off it would be considered weak.â I rise slowly, sitting upright.
âExactly,â he answers. âAre you hurt?â His gaze rakes over me with a desperate edge, like he needs to see every inch for himself.
âMy knee is sore,â I admit in a whisper, because itâs Dain. Dain, whom Iâve known since we were five and six. Dain, whose father is one of my motherâs most trusted advisers. Dain, who held me together when Mira left for the Riders Quadrant and again when Brennan died.
He takes my chin between his thumb and forefinger, turning my face left and right for his inspection. âThatâs all? Youâre sure?â His hands run down my sides and pause at my ribs. âAre you wearing daggers?â
Rhiannon takes my boot off and sighs in relief, wiggling her toes.
I nod. âThree at my ribs and one in my boot.â Thank gods, or Iâm not sure Iâd be sitting here right now.
âHuh.â He drops his hands and looks at me like heâs never seen me before, like Iâm a complete stranger, but then he blinks and itâs gone. âGet your boots switched. You two look ridiculous. Vi, do you trust this one?â He nods toward Rhiannon.
She could have waited for me at the security of the citadel walls and thrown me off just like Jack tried to do, but she didnât.
I nod. I trust her as much as anyone can trust another first-year around here.
âAll right.â He stands and turns toward her. There are sheaths at the sides of his leathers, too, but there are daggers in each of them, where mine are still empty. âIâm Dain Aetos, and Iâm the leader for Second Squad, Flame Section, Second Wing.â
Squad leader? My brows jump. The highest ranks among the cadets in the quadrant are wingleader and section leader. Both positions are held by elite third-years. Second-years can rise to squad leaders, but only if theyâre exceptional. Everyone else is simply a cadet before Threshingâwhen the dragons choose who they will bondâand a rider after. People die too often around here to hand out ranks prematurely.
âParapet should be over in the next couple of hours, depending on how fast the candidates cross or fall. Go find the redhead with the rollâsheâs usually carrying a crossbowâand tell her that Dain Aetos put both you and Violet Sorrengail into his squad. If she questions you, tell her she owes me from saving her ass at Threshing last year. Iâll bring Violet back to the courtyard shortly.â
Rhiannon glances at me, and I nod.
âGo before someone sees us,â Dain barks.
âGoing,â she answers, shoving her foot into her boot and lacing it quickly as I do the same with mine.
âYou crossed the parapet with an equestrian boot too big for you?â Dain asks, glaring down at me with incredulity.
âShe would have died without trading mine.â I stand and wince as my knee objects and tries to buckle.
âAnd youâre going to die if we donât find you a way out of here.â He offers his arm. âTake it. We need to get you to my room. You need to wrap that knee.â His eyebrows rise. âUnless you found some miracle cure I donât know about in the last year?â
I shake my head and take his arm.
âDamn it, Violet. Damn it.â He tucks mine discreetly against his side, grabs my rucksack with his empty hand, then leads me into a tunnel at the end of the alcove in the outer wall I hadnât even seen. Mage lights flicker on in the sconces as we pass and extinguish after we go by. âYouâre not supposed to be here.â
âWell aware.â I let myself limp a little, since no one can see us now.
âYouâre supposed to be in the Scribe Quadrant,â he seethes, leading me through the tunnel in the wall. âWhat the hell happened? Please tell me you did not volunteer for the Riders Quadrant.â
âWhat do you think happened?â I challenge as we reach a wrought-iron gate that looks like it was built to keep out a trollâ¦or a dragon.
He curses. âYour mother.â
âMy mother.â I nod. âEvery Sorrengail is a rider, donât you know?â
We make it to a set of circular steps, and Dain leads me up past the first and second floor, stopping us on the third and pushing open another gate that creaks with the sound of metal on metal.
âThis is the second-year floor,â he explains quietly. âWhich meansââ
âIâm not supposed to be up here, obviously.â I tuck in a little closer. âDonât worryâif someone sees us, Iâll just say that I was overcome with lust at first sight and couldnât wait another second to get you out of your pants.â
âEver the smart-ass.â A wry smile tugs at his lips as we start down the hall.
âI can throw in a few oh, Dain cries once weâre in your room just for believability,â I offer, and actually mean it.
He snorts as he drops my pack in front of a wooden door, then makes a twisting motion with his hand in front of the handle. A lock audibly clicks.
âYou have powers,â I say.
Itâs not news, of course. Heâs a second-year rider, and all riders can perform lesser magics once their dragons choose to channel their powerâ¦but itâsâ¦Dain.
âDonât look so surprised.â He rolls his eyes and opens the door, carrying my pack as he helps me inside.
His room is simple, with a bed, dresser, desk, and wardrobe. Thereâs nothing personal about it other than a few books on his desk. I note with a tiny burst of satisfaction that one is the tome on the Krovlan language that I gave him before he left last summer. Heâs always had a gift for languages. Even the blanket on his bed is simple, rider black, as if he might forget why heâs here while sleeping. The window is arched, and I move toward it. I can see the rest of Basgiath across the ravine through the clear glass.
Itâs the same war college and yet an entire world away. There are two more candidates on the parapet, but I look away before I can feel invested just to watch them fall. There is only so much death one person can take in a day, and Iâm at my fucking maximum.
âDo you have wraps in here?â He hands me the rucksack.
âGot them all from Major Gillstead,â I answer with a nod, plopping down on the edge of his expertly made bed and starting to dig through my pack. Luckily for me, Mira is an infinitely better packer than I am, and the wraps are easy to spot.
âMake yourself at home.â He grins, leaning back against the closed door and hooking one ankle over the other. âAs much as I hate that youâre here, I have to say itâs more than nice to see your face, Vi.â
I look up, and our eyes meet. The tension thatâs been in my chest for the last weekâhell, the last six monthsâeases, and for a second, itâs just us. âIâve missed you.â Maybe itâs exposing a weakness, but I donât care. Dain knows almost everything there is to know about me anyway.
âYeah. Iâve missed you, too,â he says quietly, his eyes softening.
My chest draws tight, and thereâs an awareness between us, an almost tangible sense ofâ¦anticipation as he looks at me. Maybe after all these years, weâre finally on the same page when it comes to wanting each other. Or maybe heâs just relieved to see an old friend.
âYouâd better get that leg wrapped.â He turns around to face the door. âI wonât look.â
âItâs nothing you havenât seen before.â I arch my hips and shimmy my leather pants down past my thighs and over my knees. Shit. The one on the left is swollen. If anyone else had taken that stumble, they would have ended up with a bruise, maybe even a scrape. But me? I have to fix it so my kneecap stays where itâs supposed to. Itâs not just my muscles that are weak. My ligaments that hold my joints together donât work for shit, either.
âYeah, well, weâre not sneaking away to swim in the river, are we?â he teases. We grew up together through every post our parents had been stationed at, and no matter where we were, we always managed to find a place to swim and trees to climb.
I fasten the wrap at the top of my knee, then wind and secure the joint in the same way Iâve done since I was old enough for the healers to teach me. Itâs a practiced motion that I could do in my sleep, and the familiarity of it is almost soothing, if it didnât mean I was starting in the quadrant wounded.
As soon as I get it fastened with the little metal clasp, I stand and tug my leathers back up over my ass and button them. âAll covered.â
He turns and glances over me. âYou lookâ¦different.â
âItâs the leathers.â I shrug. âWhy? Is different bad?â It takes a second to close my rucksack and haul it up and over my shoulders. Thank you, gods, the ache in my knee is manageable with it bound like this.
âItâs justâ¦â He shakes his head slowly, teasing his lower lip with his teeth. âDifferent.â
âWhy, Dain Aetos.â I grin and walk toward him, then grasp the door handle at his side. âYouâve seen me in swimwear, tunics, and even ballgowns. Are you telling me itâs the leather that does it for you?â
He scoffs, but thereâs a slight flush to his cheeks as his hand covers mine to open the door. âGlad to see our year apart hasnât dulled your tongue, Vi.â
âOh,â I toss over my shoulder as we walk into the hallway, âI can do quite a few things with my tongue. Youâd be impressed.â My smile is so wide that it almost hurts, and just for a second, I forget that weâre in the Riders Quadrant or that Iâve just survived the parapet.
His eyes heat. Guess heâs forgotten, too. Then again, Miraâs always made it clear that riders arenât an inhibited bunch behind these walls. Thereâs not much reason to deny yourself when you might not live through tomorrow.
âWe have to get you out of here,â he says, shaking his head like he needs to clear it. Then he does the hand thing again, and I hear the lock slide into place. Thereâs no one in the hallway, and we make it to the stairwell quickly.
âThanks,â I say as we start descending. âMy knee feels way better now.â
âI still canât believe your mother thought putting you into the Riders Quadrant was a good idea.â I can practically feel the anger vibrating off him next to me as we walk down the stairs. Thereâs no banister on his side, but he doesnât seem to mind, even though a single misstep would be the end of him.
âMe neither. She announced her decree about which quadrant Iâd choose last spring, after I passed the initial entrance exam, and I immediately started working with Major Gillstead.â Heâll be so proud when he reads the rolls tomorrow and sees that Iâm not on them.
âThereâs a door at the bottom of this stairwell, below the main level, that leads to the passage into the Healers Quadrant farther up the ravine,â he says as we approach the first floor. âWeâll get you through that and into the Scribe Quadrant.â
âWhat?â I stop as my feet hit the polished stone landing at the main floor, but he continues downward.
Heâs already three steps beneath me when he realizes Iâm not with him. âThe Scribe Quadrant,â he says slowly, turning to face me.
This angle makes me taller than he is, and I glare down at him. âI canât go to the Scribe Quadrant, Dain.â
âIâm sorry?â His eyebrows fly up.
âShe wonât stand for it.â I shake my head.
His mouth opens, then shuts, and his fists clench at his sides. âThis place will kill you, Violet. You canât stay here. Everyone will understand. You didnât volunteerânot really.â
Anger bristles up my spine, and my gaze narrows on him. Ignoring who did or did not volunteer me, I snap, âOne, Iâm well aware of what my chances are here, Dain, and two, usually fifteen percent of candidates donât make it past the parapet, and Iâm still standing, so I guess Iâm beating those odds already.â
He backs up another step. âIâm not saying you didnât just kick absolute ass by getting here, Vi. But you have to leave. Youâll break the first time they put you in the sparring ring, and thatâs before the dragons sense that youâreâ¦â He shakes his head and looks away, his jaw clenching.
âIâm what?â My hackles rise. âGo ahead and say it. When they sense Iâm less than the others? Is that what you mean?â
âDamn it.â He rakes his hand over his close-cropped light-brown curls. âStop putting words in my mouth. You know what I mean. Even if you survive to Threshing, thereâs no guarantee a dragon will bond you. As it was, last year we had thirty-four unbonded cadets who have just been sitting around, waiting to restart the year with this class to get a chance at bonding again, and theyâre all perfectly healthyââ
âDonât be an asshole.â My stomach falls. Just because he might be right doesnât mean I want to hear itâ¦or want to be called unhealthy.
âIâm trying to keep you alive!â he shouts, his voice echoing off the stone of the stairwell. âIf we get you to the Scribe Quadrant right now, you can still ace their test and have a phenomenal story to tell when youâre out drinking. I take you back out thereââhe points to the doorway that leads to the courtyardââitâs out of my hands. I canât protect you here. Not fully.â
âIâm not asking you to!â Waitâ¦didnât I want him to? Wasnât that what Mira suggested? âWhy would you tell Rhiannon to put me in your squad if you just wanted to sneak me out the back door?â
The vise around my chest squeezes tighter. Next to Mira, Dain is the person who knows me best on the entire damned Continent, and even he thinks I canât hack it here.
âTo make her leave so I could get you out!â He climbs two steps, shortening the distance between us, but thereâs no give in the set of his shoulders. If determination had a physical form, it would be Dain Aetos right now. âDo you think I want to watch my best friend die? Do you think itâll be fun to see what theyâll do to you, knowing youâre General Sorrengailâs daughter? Putting on leathers doesnât make you a rider, Vi. Theyâre going to tear you to shreds, and if they donât, the dragons will. In the Riders Quadrant, you either graduate or die, and you know that. Let me save you.â His entire posture droops, and the plea in his eyes shreds some of my indignation. âPlease let me save you.â
âYou canât,â I whisper. âShe said sheâd haul me right back. I either leave here as a rider or as a name on a stone.â
âShe didnât mean it.â He shakes his head. âShe canât mean that.â
âShe means it. Even Mira couldnât talk her out of it.â
He searches my eyes and tenses, as if he sees the truth of it there. âShit.â
âYeah. Shit.â I shrug, like itâs not my life weâre talking about here.
âAll right.â I can see him mentally changing gears, adapting to the information. âWeâll find another way. For now, letâs go.â He takes my hand and leads me to the alcove we disappeared from. âGet out there and meet the other first-years. Iâll go back and enter from the turret doorway. Theyâll figure out we know each other soon enough, but donât give anyone ammunition.â He squeezes my hand and lets go, walking away without another word and disappearing into the tunnel.
I grip the straps of my rucksack and walk into the dappled sunlight of the courtyard. The clouds are breaking, and the drizzle is burning off as the gravel crunches beneath my feet on my way toward the riders and cadets.
The massive courtyard, which could easily fit a thousand riders, is just like the map in the archives recorded. Shaped like an angular teardrop, the rounded end is formed by a giant outer wall at least ten feet thick. Along the sides are stone halls. I know the four-story building carved into the mountain with the rounded end is for academics, and the one on the right, towering over the cliff, is the dorms, where Dain took me. The imposing rotunda linking the two buildings also serves as the entrance to the gathering hall, commons, and library behind it. I quit gawking and turn in the courtyard to face the outer wall. Thereâs a stone dais on the right side of the parapet, occupied by two uniformed men I recognize as the commandant and executive commandant, both in full military dress, their medals winking in the sunlight.
It takes me a few minutes to find Rhiannon in the growing crowd, talking to another girl whose jet-black hair is cut just as short as Dainâs.
âThere you are!â Rhiannonâs smile is genuine and full of relief. âI was worried. Is everythingâ¦â She lifts her eyebrows.
âIâm good to go.â I nod and turn toward the other woman as Rhiannon introduces us. Her name is Tara, and sheâs from the Morraine province to the north, along the coast of the Emerald Sea. She has that same air of confidence Mira does, and her eyes dance with excitement as she and Rhiannon talk about how theyâve both obsessed over dragons since childhood. I pay attention but only enough to recall details if we need to form an alliance.
An hour passes, then another, according to the Basgiath bells, which we can hear from here. Then the last of the cadets walks into the courtyard, followed by the three riders from the other turret.
Xaden is among them. Itâs not just his height that makes him stand out in this crowd but the way the other riders all seem to move around him, like heâs a shark and theyâre all fish giving him a wide berth. For a second, I canât help but wonder what his signet is, the unique power from the bond with his dragon, and if thatâs why even the third-years seem to scurry out of his way as he strides up to the dais with lethal grace. There are ten of them in total up there now, and from the way Commandant Panchek moves to the front, facing usâ
âI think weâre about to start,â I say to Rhiannon and Tara, and they both turn to face the dais. Everyone does.
âThree hundred and one of you have survived the parapet to become cadets today,â Commandant Panchek starts with a politicianâs smile, gesturing to us. The guy has always talked with his hands. âGood job. Sixty-seven did not.â
My chest clenches as my brain spins the calculation quickly. Almost twenty percent. Was it the rain? The wind? Thatâs more than average. Sixty-seven people died trying to get here.
âIâve heard this position is just a stepping stone for him,â Tara whispers. âHe wants Sorrengailâs job, then General Melgrenâs.â
The commanding general of all Navarreâs forces. Melgrenâs beady eyes have always made me shrivel every time weâve met during my motherâs career.
âGeneral Melgrenâs?â Rhiannon whispers from my other side.
âHeâll never get it,â I say quietly as the commandant welcomes us to the Riders Quadrant. âMelgrenâs dragon gives him the signet ability to see a battleâs outcome before it happens. Thereâs no beating that, and you canât be assassinated if you know itâs coming.â
âAs the Codex says, now you begin the true crucible!â Panchek shouts, his voice carrying over the five hundred of us that I estimate are in this courtyard. âYou will be tested by your superiors, hunted by your peers, and guided by your instincts. If you survive to Threshing, and if you are chosen, you will be riders. Then weâll see how many of you make it to graduation.â
Statistics say about a quarter of us will live to graduate, give or take a few on any year, and yet the Riders Quadrant is never short volunteers. Every cadet in this courtyard thinks they have what it takes to be one of the elite, the very best Navarre has to offerâ¦a dragon rider. I canât help but wonder for the smallest of seconds if maybe I do, too. Maybe I can do more than just survive.
âYour instructors will teach you,â Panchek promises, his hand sweeping to the line of professors standing at the doors to the academic wing. âItâs up to you how well you learn.â He swings his pointer finger at us. âDiscipline falls to your units, and your wingleader is the last word. If I have to get involvedâ¦â A slow, sinister smile spreads across his face. âYou donât want me involved.
âWith that said, Iâll leave you to your wingleaders. My best advice? Donât die.â He walks off the dais with the executive commandant, leaving only the riders on the stone stage.
A brunette woman with wide shoulders and a scarred sneer stalks forward, the silver spikes on the shoulders of her uniform flashing in the sunlight. âIâm Nyra, the senior wingleader of the quadrant and the head of the First Wing. Section leaders and squad leaders, take your positions now.â
My shoulder is jostled as someone walks by, pushing between Rhiannon and me. Others follow suit until there are about fifty people in front of us, spaced out in formation.
âSections and squads,â I whisper to Rhiannon, in case she didnât grow up in a military family. âThree squads in each section and three sections in each of the four wings.â
âThank you,â Rhiannon answers.
Dain stands in the section for Second Wing, facing me but averting his eyes.
âFirst Squad! Claw Section! First Wing!â Nyra calls out.
A man closer to the dais raises his hand.
âCadets, when your name is called, take up formation behind your squad leader,â Nyra instructs.
The redhead with the crossbow and roll steps forward and begins calling names. One by one, cadets move from the crowd to the formation, and I keep count, making snap judgments based off clothing and arrogance. It looks like each squad will have about fifteen or sixteen people in it.
Jack is called into the Flame Section of First Wing.
Tara is called into the Tail Section, and soon they start on Second Wing.
I let loose a thankful sigh when the wingleader steps forward and it isnât Xaden.
Rhiannon and I are both called to Second Squad, Flame Section, Second Wing. We get into formation quickly, lining up in a square. A quick glance tells me that we have a squad leaderâDain, who isnât looking at meâa female executive squad leader, four riders who look like they might be second- or third-years, and nine first-years. One of the riders with two stars on her uniform and half-shaved, half-pink hair has a rebellion relic that winds around her forearm, from her wrist to above her elbow, where it disappears under her uniform, but I look away so she wonât catch me staring.
Weâre silent as the rest of the wings are called. The sun is out in full now, beating into my leathers and scorching my skin. I told him not to keep you in that library. Momâs words from this morning haunt me, but itâs not like I could have prepared for this. I have exactly two shades when it comes to the sun, pale and burned.
When the order sounds, we all turn to face the dais. I try to keep my gaze on the roll-keeper, but my eyes jerk right like the traitors they are, and my pulse leaps.
Xaden watches me with a cold, calculating look that feels like heâs plotting my death from where he stands as the wingleader for Fourth Wing.
I lift my chin.
He cocks his scarred eyebrow. Then he says something to Second Wingâs wingleader, and then every wingleader joins in on whatâs obviously a heated discussion.
âWhat do you think theyâre talking about?â Rhiannon whispers.
âQuiet,â Dain hisses.
My spine stiffens. I canât expect him to be my Dain here, not under these circumstances, but still, the tone is jarring.
Finally, the wingleaders turn around to face us, and the slight tilt to Xadenâs lips makes me instantly queasy.
âDain Aetos, you and your squad will switch with Aura Beinhavenâs,â Nyra orders.
Wait. What? Who is Aura Beinhaven?
Dain nods, then turns to us. âFollow me.â He says it once, then strides through formation, leaving us to scurry after him. We pass another squad on the way fromâ¦fromâ¦
The very breath freezes in my lungs.
Weâre moving to Fourth Wing. Xadenâs wing.
It takes a minute, maybe two, and we take our place in the new formation. I force myself to breathe. Thereâs a fucking smirk on Xadenâs arrogant, handsome face.
Iâm now entirely at his mercy, a subordinate in his chain of command. He can punish me however he likes for the slightest infraction, even imaginary ones.
Nyra looks at Xaden as she finishes assignments, and he nods, stepping forward and finally breaking our staring contest. Iâm pretty sure he won, considering my heart is galloping like a runaway horse.
âYouâre all cadets now.â Xadenâs voice carries out over the courtyard, stronger than the others. âTake a look at your squad. These are the only people guaranteed by Codex not to kill you. But just because they canât end your life doesnât mean others wonât. You want a dragon? Earn one.â
Most of the others cheer, but I keep my mouth shut.
Sixty-seven people fell or died in some other way today. Sixty-seven just like Dylan, whose parents would either collect their bodies or watch them be buried at the foot of the mountain under a simple stone. I canât force myself to cheer for their loss.
Xadenâs eyes find mine, and my stomach clenches before he looks away. âAnd I bet you feel pretty badass right now, donât you, first-years?â
More cheers.
âYou feel invincible after the parapet, donât you?â Xaden shouts. âYou think youâre untouchable! Youâre on the way to becoming the elite! The few! The chosen!â
Another round of cheers goes up with each declaration, louder and louder.
No. Thatâs not just cheering, itâs the sound of wings beating the air into submission.
âOh gods, theyâre beautiful,â Rhiannon whispers at my side as they come into viewâa riot of dragons.
Iâve spent my life around dragons, but always from a distance. They donât tolerate humans they havenât chosen. But these eight? Theyâre flying straight for usâat speed.
Just when I think theyâre about to fly overhead, they pitch vertically, whip the air with their huge semitranslucent wings, and stop, the gusts of wing-made wind so powerful that I nearly stagger backward as they land on the outer semicircular wall. Their chest scales ripple with movement, and their razor-sharp talons dig into the edge of the wall on either side. Now I understand why the walls are ten feet thick. Itâs not a barrier. The edge of the fortress is a damned perch.
My mouth drops open. In my five years of living here, Iâve never seen this, but then again, Iâve never been allowed to watch what happens on Conscription Day.
A few cadets scream.
Guess everyone wants to be a dragon rider until theyâre actually twenty feet away from one.
Steam blasts my face as the navy-blue one directly in front of me exhales through its wide nostrils. Its glistening blue horns rise above its head in an elegant, lethal sweep, and its wings flare momentarily before tucking in, the tip of their top joint crowned by a single fierce talon. Their tails are just as fatal, but I canât see them at this angle or even tell which breed of dragon each is without that clue.
All are deadly.
âWeâre going to have to bring the masons in again,â Dain mutters as chunks of rock crumble under the dragonsâ grips, crashing to the courtyard in boulders the size of my torso.
There are three dragons in various shades of red, two shades of greenâlike Teine, Miraâs dragonâone brown like Momâs, one orange, and the enormous navy one ahead of me. Theyâre all massive, overshadowing the structure of the citadel as they narrow their golden eyes at us in absolute judgment.
If they didnât need us puny humans to develop signet abilities from bonding and weave the protective wards they power around Navarre, Iâm pretty sure theyâd eat us all and be done. But they like protecting the Valeâthe valley behind Basgiath the dragons call homeâfrom merciless gryphons and we like living, so here we are in the most unlikely of partnerships.
My heart threatens to beat out of my chest, and I absolutely agree with it, because Iâd like to run, too. Just thinking that Iâm supposed to ride one of these is fucking ludicrous.
A cadet bolts out of Third Wing, screaming as he makes a run for the stone keep behind us. We all turn to look as he sprints for the giant arched door at the center. I can almost see the words carved into the arch from here, but I already know them by heart. A dragon without its rider is a tragedy. A rider without their dragon is dead.
Once bonded, riders canât live without their dragons, but most dragons can live just fine after us. Itâs why they choose carefully, so theyâre not humiliated by picking a coward, not that a dragon would ever admit to making a mistake.
The red dragon on the left opens its vast mouth, revealing teeth as big as I am. That jaw could crush me if it wanted, like a grape. Fire erupts along its tongue, then shoots outward in a macabre blaze toward the fleeing cadet.
Heâs a pile of ash on the gravel before he can even make it to the shadow of the keep.
Sixty-eight dead.
Heat from the flames blasts the side of my face as I jerk my attention forward. If anyone else runs and is likewise executed, I donât want to see it. More screaming sounds around me. I lock my jaw as hard as I can to keep quiet.
There are two more gusts of heat, one to my left and then another to my right.
Make that seventy.
The navy dragon seems to tilt its head at me, as if its narrowed golden eyes can see straight through me to the fear fisting my stomach and the doubt curled insidiously around my heart. I bet it can even see the wrap binding my knee. It knows Iâm at a disadvantage, that Iâm too small to climb its foreleg and mount, too frail to ride. Dragons always know.
But I will not run. I wouldnât be standing here if Iâd quit every time something seemed impossible to overcome. I will not die today. The words repeat in my head just like they had before the parapet and on it.
I force my shoulders back and lift my chin.
The dragon blinks, which might be a sign of approval, or boredom, and looks away.
âAnyone else feel like changing their mind?â Xaden shouts, scanning the remaining rows of cadets with the same shrewd gaze of the navy-blue dragon behind him. âNo? Excellent. Roughly half of you will be dead by this time next summer.â The formation is silent except for a few untimely sobs from my left. âA third of you again the year after that, and the same your last year. No one cares who your mommy or daddy is here. Even King Tauriâs second son died during his Threshing. So tell me again: Do you feel invincible now that youâve made it into the Riders Quadrant? Untouchable? Elite?â
No one cheers.
Another blast of heat rushesâthis time directly at my faceâand every muscle in my body clenches, preparing for incineration. But itâs not flamesâ¦just steam, and it blows back Rhiannonâs braids as the dragons finish their simultaneous exhale. The breeches on the first-year ahead of me darken, the color spreading down his legs.
They want us scared. Mission accomplished.
âBecause youâre not untouchable or special to them.â Xaden points toward the navy dragon and leans forward slightly, like heâs letting us in on a secret as we lock eyes. âTo them, youâre just the prey.â