Onyx Storm: Chapter 13
Onyx Storm (The Empyrean Book 3)
Upon failure of three exams, Jesinia Neilwart has been removed from the adept path and stripped of all its responsibilities and sacred privileges as of January 15. Under protest, I transfer her command to Professor Grady at his over-authoritative request.
âOfficial Records: Scribe Quadrant, Colonel Lewis Markham, Commandant â
hat?â Rhiannon shrugs and pushes off the wall. âWe didnât tag along while Violet played inquisitor. We respect boundaries.â
âDo you even have boundaries with one another?â Imogen shoots a look at the three of them. âIf youâre all going with her, then Iâll excuse myself from what Iâm sure will be a fascinating trip to the Archives. See you at formation.â She gives Rhi a mock salute and heads left, toward the quadrant.
âHe basically said we could be surrounded by venin and never know it,â I tell them.
âThatâs super comforting,â Sawyer replies.
âYou look good,â I add, noting the color in his cheeks as he balances on his crutches. âFresh haircut? Clean shave?â
âItâs almost like he got up early and prepared for the visit,â Ridoc teases as we head down the tunnel, keeping Sawyer at our center.
âShut up.â Sawyer shakes his head. âI was up early trying to fit a godsawful hunk of wood to my leg because itâs the only time the wood-carver had available. Iâm starting to think I should just make something myself.â
âYou should. And I bet the thought of seeing a certain scribe made the hour tolerable.â A smile pulls at Rhiâs mouth to my right.
âDo we give you shit about whatever you have going with Tara? Or the fact that Riorson and Sorrengail fight like an old married couple?â Sawyer glares in our direction, then Ridocâs, but thereâs no hiding his immediate blush, even in the mage lights. âRidoc bedhops like a fucking frog, but no, letâs give me crap.â
We make it a few steps before none of us can smother our laughs.
âA frog?â Ridoc grins from Sawyerâs left. âThatâs the best you can do? A frog?â
âTara and I are old news.â Rhi shrugs. âLeadership is hard on both our schedules. Weâre together when we have time, but itâs not like weâre seeing other people.â She shoots a sideways glance my way. âBut heâs right, you and Riorson bicker like youâve been married fifty years and neither of you wants to do the dishes.â
âThat is not true,â I protest as Sawyer nods.
âAgreed,â Ridoc says. âAnd itâs always the same fight.â He lifts his hand to his chest. âIâll trust you if you stop keeping secrets!â He drops the hand and scowls. âItâs my secretive nature that attracted you, and why canât you just stay out of harmâs way for five fucking minutes?â
Rhi laughs so hard she nearly chokes.
I narrow my gaze on Ridoc. âKeep talking, and Iâll plant my dagger somewhere that prevents all frog-like activity.â
âDonât hate on me for being the only truly single one out of us and enjoying every minute.â We round the corner and the enormous, circular door to the Archives comes into view.
âI bet leadership secretly loves that youâre with Riorson,â Sawyer says to me, shifting his grip on the handrail of his right crutch. âLegacies usually make for stronger riders, and with as much power as you two wield? Melgren will probably escort you both to a temple of your choosing the second youâre commissioned.â
âDoubt Loial would let me in,â I mutter. âCanât remember the last time I stepped foot in her temple.â Iâd stopped praying to her years ago, along with Hedeon out of pure spite. Love and wisdom hadnât exactly shown up when Iâd needed them to.
âIf the general even waits that long.â Rhi lifts her brows. âRiorsonâs already graduated.â
âNot something weâve discussed.â I shake my head. âAnd Iâm not against it in the future, but Iâm more focused on living until graduation. What about you?â
âMaybe one day,â she muses. âJust saying that youâre lucky Melgren hasnât yanked you out of Battle Brief and personally seen to the arrangements in hope that your kid will be the next one with battle foresight in twenty-one years.â Rhi bumps my shoulder.
âShame heâs so short-sighted,â Ridoc says as we pass the first-year scribe sitting guard at the door.
The scent of parchment and ink hits my lungs, welcoming me home. I stare down the stacks that line the right side of the cavernous space like my father might walk out at any second.
âWeâre here to see Cadet Neilwart,â Rhi tells the first-year scribe manning the entrance table, which marks the invisible line only those in cream robes are allowed to cross.
The cadet hurries off as Ridoc pulls out a chair for Sawyer, and our friend sits in the same exact place Iâd spent years of my life preparing to enter this quadrant.
âYou all right?â Rhi asks quietly.
I nod and force a quick smile. âJust caught up in my head.â
âRelax, Violet.â Ridoc takes the seat next to Sawyer. âItâs not like the fate of our world rests on you finding whateverâs left of the irids.â He rubs the back of his neck. âDo you guys think itâs short for iridescent?â
âYes,â the three of us simultaneously reply.
âDamn. Letâs go back to picking on Sawyer.â Ridoc leans in his chair as Jesinia walks our way, her arms full of leather-bound tomes.
A third-year steps into her path, and she skirts him. The incident repeats with a second-year a few rows closer to us.
âTheyâre worse than riders.â Sawyerâs knuckles whiten on the crutches as he arranges them against the table.
âThey really are,â I agree, noting with pride that Jesinia keeps her head high as a third-year blatantly glares her way from the first row of study tables.
I narrow my eyes at him, and he flinches when he notices.
âIâm petitioning Grady to be on the quest squad,â Ridoc says, signing as Jesinia reaches us. âThink heâll say yes?â He raises his brows in her direction.
She sets six books down on the table and lifts her hands. âIs Violet in need of an ice wielder?â she signs.
âShe could be,â Ridoc says and signs. âGuess it all depends on your research.â
âNo pressure,â she signs and rolls her eyes, but they soften the second her gaze lands on Sawyer. âYou didnât have to walk all the way down here,â she signs, and Ridoc translates. âI would have come to you.â
âI. Wanted. Here,â Sawyer signs slowly.
Rhiannon and I share a grin. Heâs learning quickly.
Two lines of worry appear between Jesiniaâs brows, right beneath the line of her cream hood, but she nods, then looks at me. âIâve brought you six tomes I think may be of some use,â she signs, and Ridoc translates for Sawyer quietly.
âDo you need me to bury bodies?â I ask, my hands moving quickly to sign. âBecause Andarna will happily roast some scribes if theyâre acting like assholes.â
âGladly,â she chimes in gleefully.
âNo,â Tairn rebukes. âDonât encourage her.â
Jesinia glances back at the cadets who are gathering to start their day. âI have seen enough bloodshed,â she signs. âAnd I can handle the punishment meted out for my desertion of the quadrant.â
âPunishment?â My stomach sours.
âThey kickedââ Sawyer starts but signs the word âpushâ instead and drops his hands. âDamn it,â he swears at the ceiling. âRidoc?â
âIâve got you,â Ridoc says and signs. âAnd I promise, I wonât make any sexual plans for you later.â
Jesiniaâs eyes widen.
âGods help us,â Rhi mutters, then quickly signs it. âRidoc!â
âTheyâre the ones losing out,â Ridoc says and signs.
âAnd to think,â I sign to Jesinia, keeping my mouth shut, âit was almost just the two of us at this table.â
She presses her lips between her teeth, fighting a smile.
âAs I was saying.â Sawyer shoots a glare at Ridoc as he translates. âThey kicked her out of the adept program. Made up some bullshit tests they knew sheâd fail.â
My stomach sinks. I knew Markham would find a way to punish her for choosing Aretia, but never imagined heâd expel his brightest scribe from the path where sheâs so desperately needed.
Jesiniaâs attention snaps from Ridoc to Sawyer, and I wouldnât wish the look she gives him on my worst enemy. âThat was not your information to share,â she signs.
Ridoc repeats.
âThat one, I understood,â Sawyer mutters. âThey needed to know, based on your new orders.â
âI disagree,â she signs back, then blatantly looks away, her gaze finding mine. âDo not worry about me. Iâm not out there fighting venin.â She spells out the word.
âIâm so sorry,â I whisper and sign.
âDonât be.â She shakes her head. âIâve been given the one assignment with which they know I can be trustedâhelping you with research. Well, officially under Grady, but itâs really you.â
And they narrowed her scope of knowledge? It takes all the grace in my body to swallow the boulder of anger rising in my throat. âI didnât want that for you.â
She makes a face at me. âOh please,â she signs. âIâm left on my own with a treasure trove of royal tomes no one has read in at least the last four hundred years. Look at me suffering.â She rolls her eyes and smiles.
âDid you find mention of the irids?â Ridoc asks.
Jesinia blinks once, giving Ridoc a look Iâve seen enough times to wince on his behalf as she begins to sign. âYes, in the second tome I pulled.â
âReally?â His face lights up.
âAbsolutely,â she signs, her face completely deadpan. âIt was recorded that when the last irid hatches and bonds the cadet born of rider and scribe, sheâll be gifted with two signets.â
âYouâre kidding!â he signs excitedly. âThereâs a prophecy?â He turns toward me. âViolet, youâre aââ
I shake my head quickly, wrinkling my nose.
Ridoc sighs and lifts his hands toward Jesinia. âYou really are kidding, arenât you? Thereâs no prophecy.â
âOh, youâre so fucked,â Sawyer whispers.
Jesinia leans over the table slightly in his direction. âOf course thereâs no prophecy.â She signs with abrupt motions, her eyes narrowed on him, and this time Rhiannon translates for Sawyer. âJust research. Iâve barely finished translating Lyraâs journal and now have six hundred years of personal accounts to read through. Do you really think I found the answer in the first week of accessing the vault, or that I wouldnât have gone straight to Violet with that information?â
I rock back on my heels.
âI was hoping,â Ridoc says and signs. âAnd youâre kind of scary when youâre angry.â
âI am not some oracle high off whatever theyâre serving in the temple that day. I am an extremely educated scribe. Treat me as such, and I wonât get angry,â she replies, then turns toward me. âNow, I gathered these six for you to read, which mostly cover the southernmost isle of Deverelli, since thatâs the last isle we had communication with. Figured thatâs where you might start, but Iâll warn you that Grady has requested tomes about Emerald Sea exploration in the north.â She pushes the tomes across the table and lifts her hands again. âHonestly, Iâm appalled with what isnât in the vault. Thank gods Queen Maraya sent her list for you, because weâre missingâ¦â She cocks her head to the side. âI donât even know what weâre missing. I was reading General Cadaoâs journal yesterday, and a whole section of pages is ripped out after he notes that there may have been an outside isle supporting the second Krovlan uprising.â She drops her arms in exasperation. âI canât research what we donât have.â
âThe second Krovlan uprising was supported by an isle kingdom?â I say and sign slowly just to be sure I have it right. âBut that was in the four hundreds, right? And it was assumed that Cordyn sent soldiers. We severed all communication with most isles after they sided with Poromiel around 206, and they in turn killed every emissary we sent in the centuries that followed, so how would General Cadao know that?â
âExactly,â she signs. âI can only think of one scribe who might have that answer.â She lifts her brows at me.
Oh. I blink, quickly processing the information, then swearing as I reach the inevitable, damning conclusion.
âIs it you?â Rhi asks me, simultaneously signing. âOh no. Is it Markham?â
I shake my head. âMy father. And all his research, the work he had yet to publish, is now really hard to access.â My shoulders dip. Iâd been so focused on getting out of Momâs quarters with her journals after she died that Iâd completely forgotten what my father had left hidden.
âHard to access like we need Aaric and a midnight mission?â Sawyer asks, and Ridoc translates.
âHard to access like we need Dain to betray his father.â Which is highly unlikely.
âAfter disowning him in front of the quadrant, that shouldnât be hard,â Rhiannon says, lifting her brows as she signs.
âAnd itâs not like Dain hasnât already betrayed him,â Sawyer adds.
I shake my head. âHe left Navarre, not his father, and believe me when I tell you thereâs a difference.â I glance at the books, then back up at Jesinia. âThank you for these and all the work youâre doing. Iâll start here.â
⢠⢠â¢
Three days later, Iâm in Battle Brief still pondering the Dain problem as Devera flicks her wrist and the largest map of the Continent Iâve ever seen unfurls over the quadrantâs rendering. And itâs a terrifying sight.
âIâm guessing they delivered that with our things from Aretia yesterday,â Cat notes from my left.
âThere is way more red on that map than Iâm comfortable with,â Rhi remarks, tapping her pen on her notebook.
The damning color spans from the Barrens, up the Stonewater River, and ends just short of Samara before spreading along the wardline, like the enemy is searching for weaknesses. But Samara still stands. Xadenâs safe, at least for now. Heâs been gone more than ten days, and Tairn is at his witsâ end, which makes two of us. Every day heâs out there, he risks his soul and sanity. Either he has to produce that solution he promised, or we have to find a way to get him off the border.
Most of Braevick is saturated with red flags, especially along the Dunness River, but Cygnisen hasnât been recently attackedâ¦nor have they sent their cadets yet.
Braevickâs capitalâZolyaâfell months ago, but the kingdomâs seat of power, Suniva, still stands in the provinceâs north. I canât help but wonder where Queen Marayaâs summer houseâand her libraryâare. And hope theyâre at least well protected.
âCordynâs still safe,â I whisper to Cat.
âFor how long at this rate?â Her mouth purses, but I donât take it personally. My sister is stationed in Aretia. Hers is beyond the wards.
âAs you can see,â Devera says, quieting the room, âthere is a defined, supported assault happening along the wards, centered at the Samara outpost. We believe itâs simply because itâs the straightest path that leads to hereâthe hatching grounds.â
I lift my eyebrows. Itâs not like her to give us the answers.
âOur knowledge of the venin up until this point has been somewhatâ¦impeded,â Devera admits.
âThat is an understatement,â Ridoc mumbles under his breath.
âAnd Iâm sure some of you have been frustrated at the lack of instruction for the last couple of weeks. If you reach beneath your seats, youâll discover why weâve been waiting.â
I bend at the waist like every other cadet, finding a thick, canvas-bound book under my chair and retrieving it. I blink through the head rush as I sit up too quickly, then glance at the plain spine before flipping to the table of contents. âCaptain Lera Dorrellâs Guide to Vanquishing the Venin,â I read. âVenin, A Compendium, andâ¦more. Look, they made us a little anthology.â
âYouâve already read them all, havenât you?â Rhi asks, thumbing through her copy.
âAll but the last. Dark Wielders and Dark Times. Tecarus sent them to me in Aretia.â
âMy cousin Drake wrote the compendium.â Cat preens.
âYes, we get it, Cat. Youâre better.â Ridoc glances at Rhi. âWe need a copy for Sawyer.â
Rhi nods. âWe canât let him fall too behind or heâll struggle to get caught up when he decides to return.â
âHavenât seen too many one-legged riders around here.â Cat slips her anthology under her notebook. âOrâ¦any. Maybe you should ask him what he wants before making assumptions.â
She has a point, so I donât snap at her for the first comment.
âThe cadets in the Scribe Quadrant have worked tirelessly over the last couple of weeks, printing enough copies for you each to have one.â Devera sits back against the table. âNothing in this book is new to the fliers, of course, so I expect you all to pass the first test of your new history class with flying colors.â She gestures to Kiandra. âThis particular course will be taught by Professor Kiandra and, for the sake of speed and convenience, will take place in this room on Tuesdays and Thursdays. As our runes expert has declined to come to us, you will also be rotating in two-week cycles to Aretia for rune intensives. Check with your section leaders for the new schedule regarding sharing the flight field and your rune dates.â
A class-wide grumble fills the room, even from the third-years behind us. I glance over my shoulder and note Dain in the top row. Heâs been gone so often I havenât had a chance to ask him about helping me get to Dadâs research.
âDonât complain,â Devera warns, lifting her finger. âWeâre only adding three classes to the schedule, all of which will save your lives.â
âThree more classes?â Ridoc moans, and the sentiment is echoed around the room. âOn top of quest squad research?â He glances my way. âIâm only halfway through the first Deverelli text as it is.â
A smile pulls at my mouth that heâs jumped in with both feet, regardless of knowing thereâs absolutely no chance of him going.
âI mean it. Whiners donât wear black,â Professor Devera snaps. âRead the book and live. Donât and die.â She sighs, then squares her shoulders and looks around the room. âI do, however, regret to inform you that a crucial piece of information surfaced during printing and therefore is not included. It has now been confirmed by three different sources that high-level veninâwe believe Sage and Mavenâcan and do wield signets.â
Silence falls thicker than the snow outside, every cadet besides those of us who already knew freezing completely. It took them ten days to confirm?
âI know,â Devera says with uncharacteristic gentleness. âItâs a shock. Iâll give you a second to sit with it.â
I spot more than one head dropping in the rows ahead of us, like weâve just been handed our defeat. I canât blame them; most of us have only been taught to battle fliers with lesser magics.
âAnd thatâs all the time you get.â Devera stands. âWelcome to the new face of battle, where we are not only outnumbered in the sky but now equally matched on the field in terms of the skill of our opponents. You can and should expect to face a dark wielder with the same abilities as your friends, your squadmatesââshe glances my wayââand yourselves.â
Another murmur rises, and Professor Devera silences it by raising her hand.
âWith that in mind, the nature of challenges will change under the supervision of Professor Emetterio to include wielding in order to better prepare you for actual combat.â Her voice rises above the growing number of worried conversations. âBut death is no longer an acceptable outcome when you face your classmates. The days of settling your scores on the mat are over. We need each and every one of you to survive to graduation.â
âEasy to say when youâre not facing Sorrengail,â Caroline Ashton calls out.
Fair point. I have no business wielding on a challenge mat.
âWe arenât going to throw you to the wolves,â Devera tells her. âThe third class youâll be adding will be a hands-on approach to prepare you for signet-against-signet combat. Youâll have a rotating roster of professors to benefit from all signet types, and the Eastern Wing has temporarily loaned us their most powerful rider to start your instruction.â
My throat tightens, and my heart starts to pound.
âAnd on that note.â Devera gestures to the door at the back of the room, and I turn so fast my vision swims. âLook who just arrived.â
Xaden stands next to Professor Kaori in the doorway, casually leaning against the frame with his arms crossed, with a tiny, yet undeniable tilt to his mouth as our eyes lock.
I smile instantly. Thank you, gods, he found a way to stay within the wards by teachingâ
Teaching.
Oh shit. Article Eight, Section One of the Basgiath Code of Conduct.
My face falls, and Xaden tilts his head as shadows brush against my shields.
âWhatâs wrong?â he asks when I let him in.
âEveryone, welcome our newest member of your leadership team. Professor Riorson,â Devera announces.
My ribs strain, as if they can hold my heart together if they just squeeze tight enough. âI think our relationship just ended.â