Field training: Day 16, hour 1
âWhat the fuck were you doing back there, Egan?â Malum grabbed me by the neck of my shirt and flung me across the barracks.
My enchanted wound burned as I slammed against the metal wall.
Clearly, what I needed after fighting in a traumatic battle was more violence.
âExceptional communication skills. Quite the leader,â I coughed out sarcastically, my breath short and painful in my mangled chest as I slumped on the ground.
Wounds peppered every inch of my skin.
It was a miracle my clothes were still on with how many rips they had from knives, swords, pincers, nails, and teeth.
I didnât care.
I was empty inside.
Scorpius stalked forward and stood next to Malum.
At least the kings were predictable. After the awful battle, it was nice to have some structure.
âYou dare criticize Corvus? He did his job! You were a fucking liability and an embarrassment.â Scorpiusâs pale cheekbones were streaked with gore. The eye tattoo on his neck blinked as he swallowed thickly.
âI didnât know it would be like thatâ¦â I trailed off, barely able to hear my voice.
The screaming was still loud.
Malum pushed Scorpius aside and once again slammed me into the metal wall. Blunt force trauma made my head spin, and I saw stars.
Either I was heavily concussed, or I was having a religious experience. I hoped it was the former. Praying seemed like a lot of work.
Malumâs voice was the deepest Iâd heard it. âIt doesnât matter what the fuck it was like, or how the fuck it felt. When we fight, we fight as a unit. You didnât fight, Aran. You gave up. Iâve never seen such a pathetic display. I could fight better at ten years old.â
Again he slammed me.
Yay, more stars.
The other recruits stood silent and watched. Even John looked pissed at me.
âThey were innocent people,â I whispered.
âNo, they were the ungodly!â Gray eyes splintered like broken glass, and Malum reeked of decay. Gore also covered him.
âBut we could have helped them.â My voice cracked. âWe should have done something.â
Scorpius leaned close to Malum and ran his fingers across my face as he felt my expression. Unlike when he gently touched the kings, he dug his fingernails lightly across my skin.
I shivered and my stomach pinched.
âYou donât look like a dumbass, pretty boy,â Scorpius snarled. âYet you think you could have saved them?â His nails slowly scraped across my cheekbones and down my jaw.
Malumâs grip on my shirt tightened, and he pulled my collar so I struggled to breathe. âAll we can do is kill them.â He inhaled harshly. âThat is our mercy.â
I shook my head as I hyperventilated and refused to accept that. âWe gave up on them.â
We failed them. I failed that young woman.
What was the point of big sisters if they didnât fight to save you? If they didnât save you when you couldnât save yourself? It didnât matter that it actually wasnât Jinx. My twisted psyche could see all the implications.
Karma was real.
The young woman Iâd struggled with had been the sister, daughter, and friends of someone else. But no one had saved her.
They never do.
I reared forward and banged my head back as hard as I could into the metal wall. Desolation blinded me.
I hit harder.
Malum asked with annoyance, âWhat the fuck is wrong with you?â He was probably jealous he wasnât getting to do it.
Again, I bludgeoned myself.
âStop it!â Malum growled, and his grip tightened.
None of us saved any of the villagers from their fate. Just like no one saved me.
I did it again with more force.
And again.
Again.
John shouted. âAran, stop it!â
Again.
âI said to stop hurting yourself, you fool! Pull yourself together!â Malum yanked me away from the wall so my flailing head met nothing but air.
His hand remained tangled in my shirt.
âYou donât understand,â I whispered as I clawed at myself with my nails. Scoured my skin.
âHeâs losing it,â Scorpius observed coldly.
Malum used his arms to pin me so I couldnât claw at myself. âGet it together, and be a man. This is war! This is what we do!â
I shook my head in disagreement. âYou donât understand.â
With me fully restrained against him, Malum took a deep breath and spoke calmly, âGet off your pampered high horse. We all understand because we were there.â
I whispered brokenly, âI abandoned them.â
Just like my father did to me. Just like my mother did every time she lit me on fire.
âI didnât save them.â
Iâd failed them all, and I was too intelligent to convince myself anything else had happened on that mountainside.
Pressure built behind my eyes. If I could cry, Iâd be sobbing.
No tears fell.
My head hurt.
With my body limp, Malumâs punishing grip was the only thing that kept me upright. I was broken.
No one said anything because words couldnât make anything better.
Suddenly, a light touch ghosted across my head.
âYouâre allowed to grieve.â The words were so soft I barely heard them but they tinkled with a lyrical melody.
I looked up, and sad brown eyes hovered close.
Orionâs mouth moved, and no sound came out this time, but I could read his lips as if heâd spoken. âDonât hurt yourself over the failures of your past.â
I whispered back, âWhat else am I supposed to do?â
Golden fingers gently tucked a wild curl behind my ear. âMove forward and keep fighting.â
âItâs too hard,â I said, too tired to care that I sounded like the pampered wimp they always accused me of being.
Orion smiled, and it was breathtaking. He mouthed, âI know what itâs like to be broken. Thatâs why weâre a team.â
The dark shadows suddenly didnât seem as suffocating.
âYou promise,â I whispered to the man I barely knew. He didnât owe me anything.
He twirled one of my curls and mouthed, âI promise.â
Warmth spread through my chest as Orionâs gentle presence smoothed my jagged edges.
âLet him down! What the fuck are you doing?â Demetre burst into the barracks, and his voice vibrated with the roar of a dragon. Shane and Noah trailed.
Suddenly I was hyperaware that I was pressed flush against Malum and he was holding me up as Orion leaned close. Scorpius stood nearby watching and saying nothing.
Why had they let Orion talk to me?
Why hadnât Malum and Scorpius freaked out like usual?
My questions were forgotten as Shane rushed forward and pulled me out of Malumâs punishing grasp.
Knees giving out, the only thing that kept me from face-planting was that I didnât like Shaneâs hands on me.
I pushed away from the half warrior and found my balance.
âSun god, Aran, youâre covered in wounds.â Shane turned to the kings angrily. âHe needs to see Lyla, not be injured further by you.â
âWhat he needs is to man up,â Malum said.
âYouâre blinded by your own issues with Aran. A true leader would never act this way,â Shane said with disgust.
Malum exploded into flames.
At least some things were consistent.
The kings shifted close together. Malum and Orion frowned down at where Shaneâs hand was gripping my shoulder.
Shane was touching meâthe man who smiled when heâd talked about killing me.
I tasted bile and pulled away.
Shane kept speaking. âHeâs just a fae with no fighting experience. What did you think would happen? It was his first time in battle. Cut him some slack.â
He made me sound pathetic.
It hadnât been my first battle; it was just the first one that felt personal.
The many cuts gushing blood across my body must have been affecting me more than I realized, because I opened my mouth to argue that I wasnât a weak fae and I actually had a good amount of battle experience.
But John spoke before I could. âLetâs go, then. To Lyla.â
âFine,â Demetre agreed, and everyone shuffled out of the barracks.
John didnât smileâMr. Hyde was backâbut he leaned down and put his arm under my shoulder to support me.
Yet again, we limped together back to the fortress.
As the kings walked past us, Scorpius hung back. âDonât question Malumâs leadership ever again. Oh, and Eganâ¦â He paused.
âYes?â
âOrion might be nice to you, but heâs ours. If you overstep, we will demolish you.â He didnât sneer like usual, and the calm tone of his voice was slightly terrifying.
His warning wasnât necessary.
If Orion even was attracted to me, it was to Aran, not Arabella.
I couldnât even be intimate with anyone because of the slur on my back.
Iâd never even had a chance.
Scorpius didnât wait for a response; he just stalked away and joined his fellow kings. Malum and Scorpius flanked Orion on both sides like bodyguards from hell.
At least Orion was being taken care of like he deserved. His kind, gentle energy should be protected at all costs.
He was never mine to fight for.
I was startled out of my depressed thoughts when halfway up the steps, John said, âNever do that again.â
âNot you too.â I groaned and poked my friend.
âMe too?â
âI think the kings already made the point very clear. I got it. I fucked up.â
John stopped walking. In the red eclipse, he looked nothing like the carefree man with the boyish face and dimples. Hard lines wrapped around him like a cloak. He didnât look human.
He opened and closed his mouth twice.
Finally he said, âIt only gets worse.â
âWhat does?â
âThe battles. The training. The ungodly. The war. It only gets worse. So much worse.â
I dug my trembling fingers into my somehow preserved pocket and pulled out my pipe. Eyes rolling back, I sucked in drugs like they were sanity.
What did someone say to that?
John took the pipe from my hand and put it into his mouth as we continued to limp forward.
He blew out smoke.
Before I lost my courage, I asked, âHow have you survived this? How have you done this shit for years?â
John passed the pipe back. âEventually you forget the time before you suffered, and it feels less like abuse and more like youâre normal. Sure, there will always be a voice inside you that knows youâre being tortured. But you learn to ignore that voice so you can function.â
I inhaled smoke. âAnd if you donât ignore the voice?â
âYou go mad.â
âFuck,â I responded eloquently as we limped through the arching entrance doors and were greeted by a flash of lightning. The black-and-gold hall shimmered.
âDonât worry. I have a feeling youâll be just fine.â
I scoffed. âWhy would you say that?â
âBecause youâre like me.â
âHow so?â
âYouâve already lost your mind.â
I looked up at him, confused how that was a good thing.
He answered my silent question, âIt means you know how to survive.â
As we hobbled past, broken light streamed through the mosaic of the mother. In the shards of shattered glass, there was something new.
A red tear dripped down her cheek.
And I knew.
It was an omen.