Onyx Storm: Chapter 22
Onyx Storm (The Empyrean Book 3)
It was whispered in academic circles that Cordyn had supplied troops and weaponry for the second Krovlan uprising, but the research has led me across the Arctile Ocean to Deverelli, known to our kingdom as the treacherous isle of merchants, who to my surprise may not have been the source of the arms, but perhaps the broker.
âSubjugated: The Second Uprising of the Krovlan People by Lieutenant Colonel Asher Sorrengail Holy shit itâs hot here, and by my estimates it must only be around nine oâclock in the morning as we approach an endless line of white beaches preceded by splotches of alternating turquoise and aqua waters.
Soft green hills rise directly behind the beach, dotted with stone structures. The perplexing color reminds me of the last batch of wool when the weaverâs dye has lost its potency: itâs muted, almost faded, and its lack of color is made obvious by the contrast of the water. The closer we fly, the farther forward I lean in my seat, wholly, completely fascinated. The hills arenât dotted at all.
âThatâs the city, isnât it? Hidden in the trees?â My fingers curl in excitement around the pommels of the saddle. The area is a thriving port, with four central piers and several smaller ones.
âIt appears to be.â Before we get close enough to make out the people, Tairn banks left, taking us east.
âLet me out of this thing before anyone sees,â Andarna demands.
âNot until weâre out of range of those cross-bolts.â Tairn looks pointedly toward a long stone wall a quarter of the way up the first hill, armed with a dozen of the largest cross-bolts Iâve ever seen, all loaded with shining, metallic tips.
Dragon killers.
For once, Andarna doesnât argue.
âGiven this is an isle dedicated to peace, theyâre certainly prepared for war.â My stomach tenses. Itâs been centuries since any Navarrian has stepped foot on this isle, and if weâve overestimated the viscountâs sway with the king, thereâs every chance those cross-bolts will head in our direction.
We fly between the beach and a barrier island, where the water is a breathtaking shade of blue Iâve never seen, and I canât help but stare, trying to commit it to memory as we slowly descend to a hundred, then fifty feet above the ground. Reading about this place has in no way truly prepared me to see it.
Despite the exhaustion, I donât want to so much as blink for fear of missing a single thing. Although after flying all night, Iâm more than prepared to modify this saddle even more for sleeping when we get back to Basgiath.
âAccording to the map you were given, the estate ahead belongs to Tecarus,â Tairn says as we pass by a grouping of elegant manors on the mainland, each with its own dock and a ship that announces its ownerâs status and wealth. Tairn shifts his shoulders, and the click of the harness sounds a second before Andarna appears off his right wing, hers beating double-time to keep up.
A group of creatures darts beneath us in the water, jumping into the air in a series of graceful leaps that almost make up for the flurry of people yelling and running back into their homes as we fly over.
âI wonder what they tasteââ Andarna starts.
âNo.â My protest catches me by surprise. âTheyâre dolphinum, and theyâre just too pretty to be your snack.â Even prettier than the drawings Iâve seen.
âYouâre going soft.â Andarna snorts.
We touch down in the sand in front of a sprawling two-story manor that reminds me of a smaller version of Tecarusâs palace in Cordyn. Its tall white pillars leave a portion of the structure open to the ocean breeze, but the thick stone walls that surround the rest tell me itâs weathered storms here, too. Palm treesâtall, wispy things with broad leaves of the same muted, pale green adorning their topsâline a path to the house, and I check to make sure thatâs indeed the standard of Cordyn flying on a docked ship before I dismount, taking the extra pack weâve kept with Tairn until now.
The sand is so fine I canât help but drop down and run my fingers through it with a smile. Itâs nothing like the rocky texture along the river at Basgiath or the coarse, grainy beach of Cordyn. This makes me want to strip my boots off and walk barefoot.
Andarna lifts her claw and shakes it beside me, sending grains of sand flying in a cloud as the others land in a flurry of activity around us. âItâs going to get between my scales.â
âAnd now you understand why I didnât let you eat that tortoise,â Tairn mutters, his head perpetually swiveling, taking in our surroundings. âWeâll need to hunt before we fly back. And weâre no longer alone.â
A middle-aged man stands in the doorway of Tecarusâs manor, his short-sleeved, belted white tunic and matching pants contrasting his brown skin as his arms tremble, his mouth hanging open while he stares at Tairn and Andarna.
âIâll figure out where to do that without causing a war.â I stand up as Ridoc stomps forward, then startle when Aotrom roars.
The Deverelli man screams and runs back into the house.
âGreat first impression,â I mutter, brushing the sand off my palm.
Andarna snorts, then prances off toward the water, her wings tucked in tight.
âDo not go any deeper than your claws!â Tairn lectures, his tail nearly taking out a tree when he pivots to watch her go. âI swear, if you get in over your head, Iâll let you drown.â
Aotrom roars again, getting everyoneâs attention, including Tairnâs.
âI donât know what youâre saying!â Ridoc turns toward Aotrom.
The Brown Swordtail opens his mouth and roars louder, blowing back Ridocâs dark-brown hair and covering my friend in a layer of goopy saliva.
Gross.
Ridoc slowly lifts his hands and scrapes the slime off his face. âYelling at me doesnât help. Itâs like shouting in a language I donât speak.â
A vise of foreboding clamps down on my chest, and my gaze swings toward Tairn, then past him to where Sgaeyl and Teine survey our surroundings restlessly. Mira walks our way, rubbing the back of her neck, but Xaden stands at the edge of the water, facing away from the estate.
âI think itâs just us,â I say to Tairn, spinning slowly to take it all in.
âJust us how?â he asks.
Kira rakes her claws through the sand, and Cat is on her knees next to her, holding her face in her hands while Drake kneels at her side. Sova, his gryphon, shakes his silver head back and forth like heâs trying to clear it. Cath guards the west point of the property, his tail flicking in agitation, and Dain looks down as he walks our way.
Somethingâs off with everyone.
âI think weâre the only ones who can speak to one another.â My feet sink into the sand as I trudge my way over to Mira, and I rip open the buttons of my jacket as the heat starts to cook me from inside my leathers. âCan you talk to Teine?â
She shakes her head. âWe lost the connection as soon as we left the Continent.â
âIâ¦â I swallow hard, then lower my voice. âI can still speak to Tairn and Andarna.â
She blinks, then looks over the group quickly. âFrom the state of everyone else, Iâd say youâre alone in that department.â Her brow furrows. âDo you think itâs because youâre bonded to two? Or is it Andarna?â
I shake my head, my focus straying to Xadenâs back. âI donât know.â
âEither way, Iâm glad you still have the connection.â She gently squeezes my shoulders. âBeing cut off from magic isâ¦â
âDisorienting.â I grimace.
âYes.â She nods. âBut losing the bond?â Her face puckers for a second before she masks the emotion. âWell, I guess youâd know, since they shoved that serum down your throat.â
âNot only is everyone going to be on edge, itâll make coordinating anything a bitch, considering theyâre cut off from each other,â I say, glancing up at Tairn, whoâs backed away to take a position that puts him equally between Sgaeyl, Andarna, and me.
âGuess weâll have ample opportunity to try these out.â Mira swings her pack from her shoulder, then retrieves several leather pouches before picking the one marked with a circular protection rune I donât recognize and replacing the rest. âTrissa sent these as a test to see if runes will work out here.â She unbuttons the pouch and hands me a palm-size slice of what appears to be lilac-colored quartz, tempered with the same rune that labels the leather. âThat one is supposed to shield you from sunlight. Carry it while weâre here for me, would you?â She lifts her brows. âQuietly, of course.â
I nod and slip it into my pocket. Having someâor anyâform of power out here would put us on a more familiar footing, but it opens the door to a kind of trade Iâm not sure any of us wants to contemplate.
âYou made it!â Tecarus shouts with glee from the doorway, his arms outstretched in ostentatious welcome as he walks toward us in a fuchsia tunic embroidered in heavy gold. âPrince Halden hasnât awakened yet, but I was able to secure an emergency meeting with a chancellor to the king upon our arrival last night, and youâll be thrilled to know that your creatures may hunt in the valleys three leagues south of here where there is an abundance of wild game. Humans are not to be on the menu.â
âUnderstood,â I tell him and immediately turn toward Tairn. âIâd rather you go now so youâre at full strength than chance something going wrongââ
âAgreed.â He arches his neck and lets out a short bark of a sound that makes me lift my brows but does the trick of getting everyoneâs attention. âDo not die while I am gone.â
âIâll do my best.â
He bends a little deeper than usual given the sand, then launches skyward, his wings creating a gust of wind that weaponizes the sand around us. I throw my forearm up to protect my face and leave it there for the next few seconds as the others follow Tairnâs lead.
When I open my eyes, itâs just us humans on the beach: riders dressed in black, fliers in brown leathers, gawking Deverelli on either side of what appears to be Tecarusâs property line, and one rather pompous viscount.
âThe prince has an audience with His Majesty this afternoon, so Iâm assuming youâd all like to rest before youâ¦â Tecarus cocks his head to the side. âI suppose do nothing, since King Courtlyn will only speak to aristocracy.â He crinkles his nose at Ridoc. âYou need a bath.â
âWe need horses.â Ridoc scoops a fingerful of slime out of his ear and shakes it off his finger.
âIâm sorry?â Tecarus steps out of the slimeâs path.
âViolet wants to visit the market. Something about buying books,â Dain answers as he catches up, taking a spot to Ridocâs right.
Tecarus nods. âOf course. Youâll keep a low profile?â
âAs low as possible,â I agree.
He tells us where to find our assigned rooms, and after we thank him, I head toward the water. My boots sink in the sand with every step until I reach the zone where it firms just above the waterline.
Xaden stands with his feet apart, swords strapped to his back, and arms crossed, but when my shoulder brushes his elbow, I look up to find his face completely, totally relaxed.
I close my eyes tight, then reopen them just to be sure Iâm not imagining things. Nope, heâs really staring out at the water like weâre in the valley above Riorson House and not in enemy territory, completely cut off from magic. âHey,â I say gently.
âHey.â He tilts his head down toward mine and gives me a softâbut realâsmile.
I almost ask him how he is, since he canât talk to Sgaeyl and our own bond is blocked, but it seems like a shitty thing to do after that smile. âEveryone is heading up to take naps before we ride out to find the merchant. Halden is set to meet the king at three, so we can get a good four hours of sleep in if you want.â
âIâm going to stay out here for a little bit. You go.â He turns toward me and cups the back of my neck. âYou need the rest and definitely need to get out of the sun for a bit. Your nose is turning pink.â
âTecarus gave us the same roomâ¦â
âBecause he values his life.â He tucks the loose strands of my braid behind my ears. âGet some sleep. You need it. Iâll be up in a bit.â
âDo you want me to sit out here with you?â
His grin deepens. âWhen you clearly need to rest? No, love, though I appreciate the offer. Itâs hard to explain, but Iâm just going to take a little time to myself to soak in this view.â He grabs my hand and brings it to his chest, where his heart pounds in a steady rhythm that feels slightly more relaxed than it was in Cordynâthan it has been in weeks, really. âCan you feel it?â
âItâs slower,â I whisper.
âThereâs no magic here.â He tugs me against him. âNo power. No lure. No taunting reminder that I can save everyone if I just reach for it and take whatâs offered. Itâs onlyâ¦peace.â
For the first time since fetching the luminary, I seriously debate Tecarusâs offer.