Onyx Storm: Chapter 20
Onyx Storm (The Empyrean Book 3)
Perhaps the point of this is not to deny rebellion, but to only go to war with those you trust implicitly.
âSubjugated: The Second Uprising of the Krovlan People by Lieutenant Colonel Asher Sorrengail Upon our return, I spend a few days reading every single book on Deverelli Jesinia can find to prepare for my progress briefing with the Senarium. Between those, classes, the tomes Queen Maraya sends at my request, modifying my saddle, and the hours I spend wielding on the snow-capped peaks above Basgiath, I fall into bed exhausted every single night.
By the time Friday arrives, Iâve devoured The Dark Side of Magic, Red Regalia, The Scourge of our Times, and the nightmare-inducing A Study in the Anatomy of the Enemy, none of which brings me the answers I need for Xaden.
Neither does Jack. Heâs all too happy to tell me about asim progression, how channeling from the earth happens as easily as breathing beyond the wards, but he wonât give up the name of his Sage or give me anything other than trivial information about them. And heâs sure as Malek not telling me how Theophanie knew weâd go for the citrine or what answers Iâm searching for.
But once I finally make my way through my dadâs manuscript for the third time and scour the research that behemoth requires, I have an inkling of a thought of where he might have been headed in his hypothesis. I keep it to myself, partially because Iâm scared to be wrong but mostly because Iâm terrified Iâm right. When Varrish mentioned last year that he thought the research dealt with feathertails, I never imagined it would lead in this direction.
âI want to go,â Ridoc says as we walk down the plush red carpet of the administration building, headed for the great hall.
I search for the right words and try to quell the vat of nausea that is my stomach. Presenting to Halden is bad enough, but I skipped breakfast knowing the entire Senarium waits for me, most likely to assign a new commander.
And Iâm not accepting one.
âItâs not going to happen,â Rhi says with a sigh from his other side. âSheâs going to have a fight on her hands as it is, and they wonât let you miss class, anyway. Theyâre not even letting us in that room.â
âI can keep you safe,â he insists, turning to me, an unpeeled orange in his hands.
âPretty sure Riorson will keep her safe,â Sawyer notes, walking on Rhiâs right with the help of his crutches and his latest metal prosthetic leg. Heâs even rejoined classes this week, though he has yet to make it to the flight field.
âAnd Mira.â Iâm taking Dadâs letter to heart.
A foursome of infantry cadets steps aside so we can pass, and the massive double doors to the great hall come into view. Cat stands near the threshold, smiling up at a tall flier Iâve never seen before.
He looks to be a couple of inches shorter than Xaden, with a lean build and a quick smile. His hair is as dark as Catâs, reflecting the same blue mage light that catches on the hilt of the blade he carries at his side and the V of daggers sheathed at his chest.
My eyebrows rise. I figured when I asked her to join this meeting with someone she trusts, sheâd choose Maren, but Iâm all for her moving on if it means sheâs going to stop staring at Xaden constantly. Though I kind of hoped Trager had a shot with her.
âHey, will you just try?â Ridocâs voice doesnât only tense up, it rises, causing all dozen people in the hallway to glance our way.
âWhatâs this really about?â I reach for his upper arm, and the four of us pause ten feet shy of the door.
âI justâ¦need to go.â He looks away and grips the orange in both hands. âOne of us needs to go with you. Ever sinceâ¦â Pain flashes through his dark-brown eyes as he brings his gaze back to mine. âEver since Athebyne, one of us has been by your side.â He lifts his finger. âExcept the time you snuck out on your little siblings-only trip to Cordyn. The school splits, and we go with you. Basgiath falls under attack, and weâre there. Heading into Poromiel for Marenâs brothers? Itâs us. We get separated, and you either get dragged into an interrogation chamber and tortured for days or nearly roasted by Auraâs fire, and I know I canât be the only one who thought, if Liam had been here, keeping watch over you, it never would have happened.â He swings that finger toward Rhiannon and Sawyer. âYou both know it crossed your minds.â
A lump grows in my throat. âI appreciate it, I do. But I donât need anyone keeping watch over me.â
âI didnât mean it that way.â He covers the orange with both hands. âI just think bad things happen when we arenât together. Rhi canât goâshe has an entire squad to leadâand Sawyer is still recovering, which leaves me. And if Riorson had been a hundred percent sure of his ability to keep bad things from happening, he wouldnât have assigned Liam to our squad in the first place. The guy is powerful, but heâs not infallible.â
If he only knew the truth. Gods know who they have waiting behind these doors to replace the ones we lost, but Iâm already sure I can only trust two of themâMira and Xaden.
âAnd you are?â Sawyer asks, leaning on his crutches.
Ridocâs eyes narrow. âIâm just as good of a fighter as any of you, and while youâve been focused on rehab and Rhiannon is chasing first-years to keep them in line, Iâve been the one reading every fucking book Jesinia shoves at me and spending extra hours trainingââ The skin on the orange splits. âIt really pisses me off when you guys act like my sense of humor somehow lessens my ability to show up for our squad.â
âRidoc,â I whisper, staring at the orange. âWhat did you do?â
âIâve been trying to tell you.â He hands me the fruit, and it immediately chills my hands. âYou arenât the only one whoâs been spending hours honing their signet.â
Using my thumb, I peel back the rind. The fruit of the orange is frozen solid beneath it. âHow did you do it?â
âIâve always been able to draw water out of the air,â he says. âPlus, I get bored waiting for Sawyer to wake up when he restsâno offenseâand if thereâs one thing healers are good at, itâs leaving fruit lying around. I realized I could freeze the water in the fruit.â
My lips part as my mind spins through the implications.
âSorrengail, are we going in or what?â Cat yells from down the hall.
I look up at Ridoc and whisper, âAre you trying to tell me that you can freeze the water in someoneâs body?â
He rubs the back of his neck. âI mean, I havenât tried it out on anyone, or anything living, of course, butâ¦yeah, I think so.â
Well, thatâs unsettling. And glorious. And horrific. All of the above, really.
âHoly shit, man.â Sawyer moves in closer. âCan other ice wielders do that?â
âI donât think so?â Ridoc shakes his head. âTurns out thereâs only a few of us who can even pull the water from the air.â
âSorrengail!â Cat snaps.
âYeah, youâre coming with me.â I push the orange into Ridocâs hand, then motion toward the door. âThough it has nothing to do with the iceâthereâs no magic where weâre headedâand everything to do with the first point you made.â
âBad things happen when weâre not together,â he says quietly.
Only go to war with those you trust implicitly.
I nod, and we head down the hallway.
âItâs about time.â Cat rolls her eyes, but her friend opens the door on the right, and I catch a quick glimpse of his name tag as we walk in. Cordella.
Her cousin?
Half the tables and benches in the hall have been pushed to the sides, leaving an open space in front of the long center table, where the members of the Senarium sit facing us, and theyâre not alone. Aetos and Markham flank Halden, who sits in the center of the group, listening to whatever lies Markham whispers.
Xaden occupies the left end of the table, his chair turned toward me, his legs outstretched as if this meeting determines the flight schedule and not the future of the Continent, his eyes locked on me.
âYou all right?â I ask, my gaze flickering toward Halden.
âHeâs still breathing, so Iâd consider that a win,â Xaden answers, looking rather bored, but the shadows around him have sharp edges that contrast the blurred ones down the table, the natural result of multiple light sources. âTheyâre set on their course, so youâd better determine ours.â
âAh, Cadet Sorrengail.â Haldenâs smile lights up his eyes, and he leans away from Markham. âRight on time.â
âActually, weâre missing someone.â I glance around the room, noting that for once in her life, Miraâs late. Itâs also impossible to miss Foley, Henson, and Pugh sitting farther down the tableâall thatâs left of our task forceâand one addition: Captain Jarrett.
âAs I see it, there are two extras in the room.â The Duchess of Morraine shoots a disdainful look over my shoulder.
âTheyâre here at my request.â I lift my chin. âAs is Cadet Gamlyn.â
Ridoc stays silent at my side.
âYou canât be seriousââ the duchess starts.
âIâll allow it,â Halden says, lifting his hand. âRecent losses have been regrettable, but a month has passed and itâs time to act. You have the citrine, and a meeting has been set with King Courtlyn. Command is being transferred to Captain Henson.â Halden gestures to the rolled parchment in front of him.
âIs he fucking serious?â I glance at Xaden.
âEntirely.â A corner of his mouth lifts. âHave fun eating them alive.â
I cross the freshly mopped floor and take the scroll, then step back so Iâm in line with Ridoc and give my orders a quick read. We will leave for Deverelli the day after tomorrow, meet with the king to try to negotiate an alliance, secure a foothold for expanding the search if we donât find Andarnaâs kind there, then report back, all under the command of Captain Henson and executive officer Lieutenant Pugh.
While Markham and Melgren search Aretia for any clues we have missed.
âDid you read this?â It takes all I have not to crush the orders. âThey want to search Aretia.â
âThey can get fucked.â
âNo,â I say to Halden.
âIâm sorry?â Halden leans forward.
âI said no.â I rip the orders in half. âNo to your commander. No to your selections. No to searching Aretia. No.â
âI warned you,â Xaden says down the table.
Halden stiffens, and the Duke of Calldyr shifts in his seat before narrowing his eyes on me. âCaptain Jarrett is an excellent addition and the best swordsman we have among the riders.â
âThatâs overly generous, considering I watched Lieutenant Riorson kick his ass without even trying a few months ago at Samara.â Power ripples through my veins, but I keep my anger at a simmer. âWe tried it your wayââ
âAnd clearly succeeded,â Halden counters. âOr are you not in possession of the artifact?â
âWe lost two riders out there because you saddled me with a squad full of people who donât know or trust one another. Yes, I have the artifact, and Iâll take it to Deverelli, but only with a squad of my choosing.â I hold my shoulders straight and catch Ridoc nodding out of the corner of my eye.
The door opens behind us, and the familiar rhythm of quick, efficient steps bolsters my courage toward pure audacity.
âSorry Iâm late,â Mira says, bypassing Cat and her cousin to stand at my right. âHell of a headwind out of the north. What did I miss?â
âI think Violet is about to lose her shit,â Ridoc whispers.
âThisââI toss the halves of the scroll at Halden, and he catches them with the same reflexes that make him lethal on the battlefieldââis not the plan, and theyââI gesture toward the seated ridersââare not my squad.â
Xadenâs smirk deepens, and he settles into his seat like heâs ready for a show.
âSearching Aretia is the first logical course of action, considering it is the only area we have no information onââ Markham starts, his cheeks leaning toward ruddy.
âYou donât speak,â I snap, meeting his gaze for the first time in months. âNot to me. As far as Iâm concerned, you have the credibility of a drunkard and the integrity of a rat. You dare complain about missing six years of information on Aretia when youâve hidden centuries of our continentâs history from public knowledge?â
Haldenâs brows rise, and Mira shifts her hand to the pommel of her sword.
âYou cannot speak to a superior officer, let alone the commander of a quadrant, with such disrespect!â Markham roars, coming out of his chair.
âIn case you missed it when I crossed the parapet, I am not in your chain of command,â I fire back.
âBut you are in mine,â Aetos warns. âAnd I speak with the authority of Melgren.â
Fury gets the best of me. âAnd I speak with the authority of Tairn, Andarna, and the Empyrean. Or did you forget that two dragons also lost their riders?â
âIf I wasnât in love with you already, I would be now,â Xaden says, crossing his ankles.
âSit, Markham,â Halden orders, a note of surprise in his tone. âYou tried and failed.â
Markham sinks into his chair.
âWeâll give this one shot. Name your squad for the Deverelli mission, Cadet Sorrengail,â Halden says. âBut know that if you fail, weâll assign another commander, and refusing to continue will negate the terms of the Second Aretia Accord.â
The one that gave Xaden back his title.
I swallow the lump in my throat. No pressure or anything.
âAccepted.â I straighten my shoulders. âFor the Deverelli mission, my squad will consist of Lieutenant Riorson, Lieutenant Sorrengail, Cadet Gamlyn, Cadet CordellaââI glance back over my shoulder to get his rankââCaptain Cordella, Cadet Aetos, Prince Halden, and whatever favorite guard follows you in case you stub your toe,â I say to Halden. âWhen we succeed, I reserve the right to switch out members after the first expedition.â
âAbsolutely not.â Aetos shakes his head. âYouâll take only commissioned officers, no fliers, and Riorson is out of the question.â
Halden lifts his hand, and Aetos quiets.
Xaden stills to the point I have to glance to see if heâs breathing.
âIâll take whomever I wish,â I counter. âAs third in line for the throne, Catrionaâs capable of speaking for Poromielââ
âAnd the captain?â the Duchess of Morraine asks, her face twisting like sheâs scented something sour. âYou need two fliers?â
âCadet Cordella deserves to have someone she trusts, too.â I tilt my head at Halden. âDragons donât carry humans who havenât crossed the parapet or climbed the Gauntlet, so youâre lucky gryphons are kinder in this regard, or youâd never keep up. Lieutenant Sorrengail is the only rider capable of creating her own wards. Cadet Aetos is the only rider I trust who speaks fluent Krovlishâwhich is the second most common language used in Deverelli. Cadet Gamlyn is dedicated to my personal safety, and even if Lieutenant Riorson werenât the deadliest rider in the whole of our forcesââI glance at Aetos, then Haldenââwhich he is, you know Tairn and Sgaeyl cannot be separated, and thereâs no telling how long weâll be forced to travel. Iâm tired of arguing this point.â
âHeâs a professor at this war college,â Aetos sputters.
âHe is my choice.â
Halden sits back in his chair and looks at me like heâs never seen me before.
âHe hasnât,â Tairn reminds me. âHe no longer knows you.â
I stare straight at Halden. âAnd the Tyrrish kept contact with Deverelli up until the last century. Who better to reopen those lines of communication than the Duke of Tyrrendor himself?â
Xadenâs surprise barrels down the bond, but he remains unnaturally still.
âYou may read my fatherâs book whenever you want,â I tell him.
âRiorson holds a seat in the Senarium,â the Duchess of Morraine argues. âHe canât just leave. He doesnât even have an heir shouldâ¦tragedy befall, though I might be persuaded to agree to his absence should he consider my daughterâs proposal.â
âProposal?â The blood runs from my face.
âOne of about a dozen since they gave me the title back. Nothing to stress over.â A soft strand of shimmering onyx brushes against my mind.
My heart lurches. We have very different ideas of stress.
âAt least say what you mean, Ilene.â Halden sends a sideways glance her way. âYou donât trust him and would like to see your bloodline in not only Morraine but Tyrrendor.â
âHe led a rebellion!â She slams her hands on the tabletop.
âMy father led a rebellion,â Xaden says without taking his eyes off me. âI took part in a revolution. Thereâs a difference in the words, from what Iâm told.â
I catch my mouth curving.
âBesides, arguing makes no difference.â Xaden sits up. âIâm going. Lewellen will speak for me in my absence while taking counsel from my only living blood relativeâCadet Durran. Lieutenant Tavis has been co-leading my classes and will step into the role of professor to teach them fully while weâre gone until itâs time for the next professor to rotate in.â
âIf I give my permission,â Halden retorts.
Wrong move, Halden.
âI ask permission of one person on the Continent, and it sure as Amari isnât you.â Xaden slowly turns his head to look down the table at Halden, and breathing becomes irritatingly difficult.
âI speak in my fatherâs stead,â Halden bites out through gritted teeth.
âRight. Because heâs the one I defer to.â Xadenâs gaze swings to me. âWhen would you like to go?â
âWe fly for Deverelli as soon as His Highness is ready.â I look Halden straight in the eye, counting on his absolute inability to read my face or sense the fear that heâll retaliate against Xaden with the power of the crown.
Halden stands, as does everyone at the table except Xaden. âLetâs at least keep that part of the orders intact. We depart the day after tomorrow.â He leaves through the northern door, followed by everyone who stood.
âNo snide remarks,â I say to Ridoc with a quick smile. âIâm proud of you.â
âI kept the inside thoughts inside,â he replies with a flash of a grin as Xaden approaches.
âYou really had to prick his temper?â I ask as he reaches us.
âNo.â Xadenâs gaze flickers to my mouth. âI did that just for fun.â
âDrake Cordella?â Mira shouts, and the three of us turn as she charges across the room toward Drake. âAs in the nightwing drift?â
He gives my sister a charming yet cocky smile. âYouâve heard of me?â
âYou were instrumental in bringing the wards down in the Montserrat offensive last year.â Her eyes narrow.
âI was.â His grin expands.
She knees him straight in the groin.
Oh gods.
âOoh.â Ridoc winces. âHeâs goingââ
Drake hits his knees, and Cat gasps.
ââdown,â Ridoc finishes.
âYou must be Mira Sorrengail,â Drake manages to say, pain etched in every line of his face.
âGuess youâve heard of me, too.â She crouches down to his level. âIf you ever endanger my sisterâs life again, my blade will replace my knee. Got it?â
To his credit, he lifts his head and sucks a breath in through his teeth. âHeard.â
âExcellent.â She pats him on the shoulder and stands, dismissing Cat with a glare before turning my way. âYou get one chance to form your own squad, and you choose your ex, your current lover, the quadrantâs resident smart-ass, two people who have tried to kill you in the past yearâone over said current loverâand whatever Dain is? These are your choices for the most important mission any rider could possibly undertake?â
âIâm glad someone said it,â Tairn chimes in.
âAndâ¦you.â Itâs not my finest comeback.
âDonât forget Haldenâs guard,â Ridoc adds. âIâm sure theyâll be super useful.â
She flat-out rolls her eyes at him, then heads toward the door. âIâll need to provision here, but it looks like Iâll have time to read the next volume in that series you love,â she says to me over her shoulder.
Momâs journals. I nod and soak up the victory for one sweet second.
We could be only days away from having everything we need: Andarnaâs family, a cure for Xaden, and whatever it is my father wants me to retrieve from that merchant in Deverelli.
The day after tomorrow canât come fast enough.