Onyx Storm: Chapter 28
Onyx Storm (The Empyrean Book 3)
There are times I look at Parapet, at the very act of Threshing and marvel that dragons have not been to Unnbriel. What we call treacherous is their idea of primary school.
âUnnbriel: Isle of Dunne by Second Lieutenant Asher Daxton â
ou canât be serious,â Rhi whispers next to me three days later in Battle Brief as Professor Devera questions first-years about the fall of Vallia, a midsize city two hundred miles west of the Bay of Malek.
Not only are the venin moving in Krovla again, but in the eight days we were gone, Cygnisenâs flier cadets arrived. Battle Brief is now beyond standing-room-only capacity. Even the steps serve as seating.
âSheâs absolutely serious,â Ridoc responds from Rhiâs other side, cracking a giant yawn that I immediately catch and repeat, fighting and failing to stifle it with my hand.
Godsdamn am I tired. Every muscle aches, my stomach canât decide if it wants to eat everything or expel it all, and Iâm starting to see double when I try to focus on the map. We flew in this morning from Athebyne and were rewarded for pushing our limits by being sent straight into Battle Brief on General Aetosâs order. At least I managed to secure my fatherâs books in my room and heard from Imogen that sheâd kept my prisoner alive first.
âHe wanted you to trade your and Xadenâsâ¦servicesâ¦for weaponry?â Sawyer asks, leaning forward from Ridocâs right and adjusting the top of his prosthesis. âI thought Deverelli was neutral. They donât even have an army.â
Xaden. My hand clenches around my pen as I scribble the nearly mid-February date on my notes. How many more times can he slip before the rings around his irises become permanent and the veins at his temples turn red? For a second in that bedroom, I thought Iâd found a temporary answer to stay his progression, but even on an isle without magic, he hadnât been safe.
âOr perhaps the isle hadnât been safe from him,â Tairn interjects.
I ignore the jab.
âCould you keep it down?â A brown-haired flier with a Cygnisen shoulder patch and third-year rank turns around and glares at Sawyer, and though I hate his scowl, I have to admit, the glasses really work for him.
âTurn it back aroundââ Ridoc starts, then pauses to appreciate the flier. âWell, hello Cygnisen. Have you been properly welcomed to Basgiath yet?â He cranks up a smile Iâve seen enough times to know heâll be coming out of someone elseâs bedroom tomorrow morning.
The flier scoffs. âI donât do second-years.â
âGood thing I fuck like a third.â Ridoc grins. âPlus, Iâm on quest squad, which gives me an additional boost of desirability.â
That earns him a second glance and a flash of interest before the flier turns around in his seat.
âWhere do you get the confidence, Gamlyn?â Maren asks from my left.
Ridoc snorts. âSurvive the Gauntlet. After that, youâre well aware one rejection isnât going to kill you.â He leans toward the flier. âBy the way, third-years usually sit up top, but if you want to be close to me, thatâs all right, too.â
The flier tilts his head and drums his pen on the desk.
I smother a laugh, and Sawyer shakes his head.
âTell Sawyer about the Deverelli Army,â Ridoc reminds me, settling back in his seat as a first-year fumbles an easy question about high-ground strategy.
âOh, right.â I yawn again and open the Archives door to a crackle of power in hopes it will keep me from falling asleep. Have to admit, itâs nice to be me again. âThey have one. They just call them guards. So yes, they have weaponry to trade, they just donât advertise it.â
âWanting you as a weapon is weird. They donât have magic,â Cat says from Marenâs left. âYouâre scary with lightning, Sorrengail, but without itâ¦â We all look her way, but she just shrugs. âWhat? You were all thinking it. I just said it.â
âIs there something more important than enemy troop movements going on up there, Iron Squad second-years?â Devera asks, and the lecture hall quiets.
Heat creeps up my neck, and I sink in my seat.
âI meanâ¦â Ridoc scratches the side of his head. âSorrengailâs kind of responsible for saving the entire Continent right now, so maybeââ
Rhiâs hand slams over his mouth. âAbsolutely not. You have our apology, Major.â
Devera arches a sardonic brow and leans back against the desk. âAnd how was your trip to Deverelli, cadet? Have you saved us all?â
Leather jackets creak in every direction as heads turn my way.
I clear my throat. âI believe the prince is debriefing leadership, but weâve brokered a deal that will allow us diplomatic access to the isle as a launching ground for further searches.â And I personally secured Courtlynâs silence on what Xaden did by promising my own like a sacrifice, adding a gentle reminder that I wouldnât want our new ally to appear weak.
âIs that all we should discuss?â she asks, her expression uncomfortably close to my motherâs, and I nod.
âOf all the shops in the merchant isle, she made us visit the bookstore,â Cat adds with an exasperated sigh, tapping her pen on her notebook, and I breathe a little easier with the transfer of attention.
âThat sounds like our Violet.â Devera flashes a smile. âSince youâre so talkative today, Sorrengail, why donât you tell us what about the offensive in Vallia is so concerning.â She gestures behind her at the map.
Shit, I really should have been paying attention. I scan the map for the length of two heartbeats, noting that some flags that had once been red are now gray, and the red has retreated from the north of Braevick and on the whole is moving nauseatingly southwest.
âIt shows southward movement,â I answer. âOnce we raised the wards in Aretia, the venin changed course, leaving conquered territory like Pavis to concentrate on Poromielâs border with Navarre in what we now know was an offensive meant to strike the Basgiath hatching grounds. Moving southwest shows a change in strategy.â Theyâre less than a dayâs flight from Cordyn by wyvern, but thereâs a lot of undrained ground to cover if feeding is their only goal. But if that were the case, the map wouldnât look quite so premeditated.
âYour best guess on that strategy?â
My stomach turns. âThey somehow know about the Aretian wards and theyâre moving into position for the inevitability of them falling.â
A murmur ripples through the room.
Devera nods. âThatâs what I think, too.â
My blood runs cold. But how?
⢠⢠â¢
The next week passes in a blur. Iâve never had to work harderâ¦or worried about Xaden quite so much.
He should be back by now. The Senarium expects us to leave in a week for Unnbriel, and Iâm getting nervous. Eight days should be enough for the circles around his eyes to fade, right?
Unless heâs progressed to asim. I shove that thought as far away as possible.
When Iâm not learning in class, pushing burnout in the range, freezing my ass off in flight maneuvers, practicing with the mini crossbow Maren gifted me, working every muscle to its breaking point with Imogen, or listening to Andarna go into exhaustive detail on why Tairn is the worstâperiodâmentorâperiodâeverâperiod, Iâm reading my dadâs books with whichever members of my squad can spare their time. It takes Dain and me two evenings to decode the clues Dad left to open the passcode-locked books, and once we do, I canât even tell my sister, since sheâs taken personal leave for the first time in her entire career.
And whenever Iâm not doing any of that? Iâm in the fighting pit with my squad, either for our own instruction or joining the rest of the quadrant in whatâs quickly become our favorite activityâwatching the shit get kicked out of one another in hopes of learning something.
This afternoon, every second- and third-year in our squad is seated on the bottom left rows of the amphitheater with a book from Jesinia in their lap while two other squads from Second and Fourth Wing practice in front of us under the guidance of Professor Carr, whoâs rotated in to teach today. Garrick and Bodhi look on from just beneath us, leaning against the wall, both shaking their heads every now and then when they, too, look up from their books.
A second-year goes flying in a blast of fire, and every single one of us looks up as the guy lands on his ass, flames still rising from his hair.
âYouâre up.â Bodhi jabs Garrick, and he takes off at a sprint onto the mat. A flick of his wrist and the flames snuff out, deprived of oxygen.
âLetting them get a little close, donât you think?â Garrick asks Professor Carr.
âOh, this is going to get good.â Ridoc sets the Continentâs most redacted volume on Unnbrielâs warlike customs in his lap, and Sawyer follows suit beside him. Sawyer hasnât joined us in flight maneuvers, but Iâm glad heâs feeling up to sitting in on classes. It bodes well for his return, if and when heâs ready, or even just ready to talk about it.
âBallsy,â Rhi agrees from my other side, using her thumb to mark her place in a book about weather patterns throughout the isles.
Professor Carr narrows his eyes on Garrick and folds his arms. âA scar would remind him to wield a little faster next time. Itâs not like heâs dead.â
âFlame never should have touched him,â Garrick argues.
âClearly you havenât taught enough to know the best methodology,â Carr snipes. âHaving powerful friends doesnât make you a good instructor.â
Garrickâs jaw ticks as he steps off the mat with the smoking second-year, and the guy goes back to his squad.
âHeâs an asshole,â Bodhi notes, then leans back against the wall and returns to reading his assigned collection of early fables from Braevick. Heâs looking for tales of dark wielders cured by love, or good deeds, or dancing naked under a full moon after drinking the venom of a rare snake only found on the farthest isle during a lunar eclipse, orâ¦something.
Anything.
I adjust the blank leather cover disguising Dadâs book and reread the passage on trial by combat for different levels of entrance to Unnbrielâs court, then roll my left shoulder with a wince. Pushing into my stiff trapezius muscle doesnât help soothe the protesting joint, either.
âYou were too hard on her last night,â Garrick grumbles at Imogen, grabbing his book from Bodhi.
For all that weâre reading, I canât begin to contemplate whatâs on Jesiniaâs desk.
âFuck off,â Imogen mutters behind me, flipping a page aggressively.
âIâm fine.â I spare a glance at both of them, then continue down the page. My fatherâs observations on the combative isle are sharp, almost clinical, but lack his usual insight. Thereâs a marked difference between this book, written when he was twenty-three and straight out of the Scribe Quadrant, and the manuscript he left for me in his office.
But when did he visit the isles? Or have the time to transcribe the rudimentary dictionaries that have quickly become the bane of Dainâs existence?
âSheâs rotated every single one of her joints at least three times in the last hour.â Garrickâs tone sharpens. âIâd say that means you need to lighten upââ
âNope.â Imogen flips another page. âYouâre not taking your frustrations with Carr out on me. If Violet thinks weâre doing too much, sheâll tell me.â
I glance over my shoulder to see her twirling her forefinger, suggesting Garrick turn back around, while Quinn leans over her shoulder, reading a volume Queen Maraya sent on venin and their medicinal uses.
Given how difficult it was to get our hands on these books, itâs wild to think that Garrick could probably walk straight from here to wherever her library is.
I blink, then lean forward, bracing my elbows on the wall right above Bodhiâs head. âHey, Bodhi?â I whisper so only the two of us can hear.
âHey, Violet?â he answers, looking up.
âWhatâs your second signet?â I lower my voice even more.
He lifts his brows, then glances in Garrickâs direction. âDonât have one.â
âAs in you donât have one that I get to know about but will eventually see you wield, or donât have one have one?â
A corner of his mouth lifts into a wry smile that reminds me of his cousinâs. âDonât have one. Just like Xaden. Why?â
âCurious,â I admit. âAnd selfishly hoping youâd be able to do something cool like keep Halden from speaking.â Gods only know what heâll do at the other isles after his performance on Deverelli.
âIf I could, would that mean I get to go on the next expedition?â His eyes light up.
âHeads up,â Garrick says, and we both look forward as a first-year with a rebellion relic steps into the pit with Timin Kagisoâthe newly promoted wingleader for Second Wing. âLetâs try to keep anyone else from burning.â
Go figure another fire wielder was Second Wingâs executive officer when Aura died.
âOn it.â Bodhi sets his book on the wall and takes a step closer to the mat near the end of the squad.
âStill canât believe they made Stirling the senior wingleader,â Sawyer mutters, glancing up the rows to where Panchek watches with other members of leadership.
âBetter than Iris Drue,â Cat notes as she works out a knot in Tragerâs shoulders. âPretty sure sheâd murder every flier in their bed if she could.â
âTrue,â Sawyer agrees, his attention shifting up the steps. âI thought you all had physics right now.â
Rhi and I both follow his line of sight as Lynx, Baylor, Avalynn, Sloane, Aaric, and Kai descend the steps on our right. The first-years are here.
âGot out ten minutes ago,â Sloane replies, her gaze darting over usâor rather, our books. âWe came to help.â
âExcellent.â Rhi jabs her thumb over her shoulders. âEmpty row behind the third-years. Take a seat and watch.â
âThatâs not what I mean.â Sloane crosses her arms and lifts her chin in a way that reminds me of her older brother. âYouâre in charge of your mission now, right?â
âYes.â My stomach sinks.
âWe want to help.â She gestures to the books.
Ridoc shakes his head. âFirst year is hard enough without adding all this into it.â
Iâm with him.
âYouâre one dragon short of even pairs,â Avalynn says, completely ignoring Ridoc. âYou know, in case you need to split up for some reason.â
Rhi cocks her head to the side.
âOdd numbers donât bother meââ I start.
âWhat Sorrengail is too nice to say is first-years arenât going,â Imogen says.
âOr helping,â Garrick adds over his shoulder.
âDidnât ask you,â Baylor challenges, glaring in Garrickâs direction. âLast time I checked, weâre the actual Iron Squad and youâre a substitute teacher.â
âThatâs not a fight Iâd pick.â I lift my brows at Baylor.
âUnless youâd like your ass kicked,â Garrick offers with a flash of a smile.
âSit or move,â Dain orders, walking down the stairs. The circles under his eyes have my brows knitting. Between decoding my dadâs clues, studying for his own classes, and his duties as wingleader, heâs taking on too much, and Iâm a major reason for it.
âWeâre trying to help,â Sloane argues, her cheeks flushing a second before her narrowed gaze drops away from Dain.
âYou can help by staying alive,â Dain counters, sliding in to sit on the edge next to Rhi and taking out Dadâs separately bound dictionary for Unnbriel from his pack. âCarr tells me youâre refusing to train your signet.â
âYou what?â I shut my book.
âYou really going to mourn the loss of another Mairi?â Sloane fires back at Dain.
âHis death will always be on my head. Yours will not.â Dainâs tone sharpens. âI donât coddle first-years anymore, so train. Your. Signet.â
âAsshole,â she whispers, and the flush in her cheeks deepens.
I lift my brows at the look she shoots him, mostly because I canât tell if she wants to stab him in his seat orâ
âFuck,â Garrick mutters, and all our heads turn toward the pit as fire erupts from Wingleader Kagiso, streaming toward the first-year.
Bodhi takes three quick steps onto the mat, then turns his hand, and the fire dies. An argument immediately ensues with Carr, but I ignore it and pivot my focus to Sloane.
âWhy wonât you train?â I ask her.
âWould you train if all you did was destroy things?â She drags her gaze from the pit. âKill people?â
Power hums along my bones, hot and insistent. âI donât know,â I say quietly. âWould I?â
She glances at Rhi.
âDonât look at me. I agree with her.â Rhi shakes her head and flips to the map section of her book.
Sloaneâs shoulders fall. âI just want to help in a way that doesnât suck the magic out of something. And I highly doubt you lot would have been content to sit aside last year while your second-years went off and saved the Continent.â
My words fail, and Aaric lifts a single brow behind her, taking note of my speechlessness.
âSolid point,â Sawyer says slowly as another first-year enters the pit against Kagiso.
âLiamââ I start.
âMade his choice,â Sloane reminds me. âWeâre making ours.â She folds her arms. âAnd he would want me to make sure youâre as prepared as you can be, even if that means none of us go with you.â
Rhi and I exchange a look, and she nods.
âFine.â I pivot in my seat and grab the heavy pack at Imogenâs feet, then rifle through for the most innocuous-looking texts. âHere you go.â I hand the stack to Sloane. âRead these and write up a one-page report on eachââ
âOh for fuckââ Kai groans from two steps back.
âNo whining. You said you wanted to help,â Rhi interrupts as Bodhi returns to the wall.
âAnd get them back to me as soon as you can,â I finish.
âThank you.â Sloane gives them to the others, then glances at me, Rhi, and Dain before following the rest of her squad up the steps.
Aaric waits, holding a tome on mythology. âScribes havenât released your mission report yet. How badly did it go?â
Ridoc scoffs. âYour arrogant brotherââ
âGive us a second,â I cut him off quickly, then set my book on my seat and scoot past Rhi and Dain to get to the steps.
âHalden was Halden,â I tell Aaric, lowering my voice. âHe did Halden things and caused Halden-style ramifications, none of which are your fault.â
A muscle flexes in Aaricâs jaw, and his grip tightens on the book. âHe get anyone killed?â
I nod. âHis guard, Captain Winshire.â
He looks toward the pit. âDid he jeopardize your mission?â
âNo. Halden got himself banned from Deverelli, but I was able to accomplish what I needed to.â It just cost Xaden⦠Gods, I donât even know how much it cost him this time.
Aaric nods, then looks back at me with eyes that are identical to his brotherâs and a gaze that couldnât be any more different. âAre you in over your head, Violet?â he asks quietly.
âNo.â I swallow.
He narrows his eyes, then nods before following his year-mates up the steps.
I turn to find the second- and third-years engaged in a heated debate, all gathered so tightly around Rhi that I can barely see her in the center.
âI think you fly from Deverelli to Unnbriel, thenââ Trager starts.
âBack to Deverelli, then Athebyne, then here?â Cat interrupts. âYou have no idea how fucking long that flight is. Then you double that journey for Hedotis, then Zehyllna, Loysam, and the minor isles? No.â She shakes her head. âNo. Even using Deverelli as a base, itâs a waste of flight time.â
I lean over Dainâs shoulder.
âI fucking hate when youâre right,â Dain mutters.
Rhi drags her finger across the map. âYou have predominantly westerly winds until you hit this latitude.â She points to the northern coast of Deverelli. âAt which point, they shift, so every time youâre coming back to report, youâre facing a headwind.â
âDragons can take it,â Maren notes quietly.
âGryphons canât,â Bodhi finishes, looking over the wall alongside Garrick.
âSo basically, weâre fucked,â Ridoc notes. âIt will take us way longer than five months to search all the isles.â
Numbers fly through my head. The major isles arenât the issue. Itâs the dozen minor isles that border the Cerlian Sea that pose the conundrum. This last trip took eight days, and that was just to Deverelli.
âInteresting read?â
I spin toward that voice. My heart jolts at the sight of Xaden on the lowest step, then settles as I take my first deep breath since he walked away more than a week ago. âHi,â I whisper, taking in every single detail of his face before locking my gaze with his. The whites of his eyes are clear, but something about the colorâ¦
âHi,â he replies, looking me over the same way I just did to him.
âYou look good.â I reach for the bond and nearly melt with relief when I feel his shields give way for me. Glittering onyx wraps around my mind in a familiar wave, and I drop my barriers. âYou feel good, too.â
âI slept,â he answers. âAnd I feel oddlyâ¦well.â He clears his throat. âFunny thing about that bedroom.â
âIn Aretia?â I brace my hand on the rough edge of the wall to keep from tugging on the edges of his flight jacket and yanking him against me.
His gaze drops to my mouth and heats. âI used to love it, and now I canât fucking stand it when youâre not there.â
âI missed this.â I lean into the bond, like I can somehow burrow into it if I try hard enough, bury myself in us. In terms of intimacy, this is even betterâ
âThan sex,â Xaden finishes, and I find myself nodding instead of lecturing him about reading my intentions, but that wasnâtâ¦
My eyes widen. Has he been honing his signet like Ridoc?
âNews from home?â Bodhi asks behind us, and I startle.
âNot unless you want to hear about how Riorson House needs roof repairs or how the oldest Sorrengail sent the largest med bag Iâve ever seen for the next expedition.â Xaden looks past his cousin to Garrick. âI just need Professor Tavis.â I step forward, but he retreats out of my reach, shaking his head. âWeâre at Basgiath.â
Right. Back to the rules.
âLater?â I move out of the way so Garrick can slide by on the steps, and the sun catches on the amber flecks in Xadenâs eyes as he nods before walking away.
Amber.
Itâs only sheer force of will that keeps me from chasing him down. Instead, I turn back toward the argument thatâs continued around Rhi.
âThen skip Deverelli and just fly straight there!â Bodhi points to the isle of Unnbriel.
âThe gryphons wonât make it!â Cat shouts.
My focus darts island to island. Ten days here. Twenty days there. A month round trip once weâre toward the outer reaches of Loysa and the minor isles. A sour feeling takes hold of my stomach, and it begins to slowly churn. The problem is reporting back to the Senarium between trips. Xaden doesnât have enough time, and neither do the Aretian wards.
âThe Empyrean will side with whatever choice you make,â Andarna promises, but Tairn is quiet, no doubt occupied with finally being able to talk with Sgaeyl after their period of forced silence.
We have to go, and we have to go now.
âSo we fuck the rules.â I raise my voice, and everyone quiets.
Cat throws a practice disk onto the map, and I recognize the sound-shield rune sheâs tempered into it.
I glance her way thankfully, then look to the others. âWe supply and we go. We leave for Unnbriel as planned, but then weâ¦disobey direct orders. We donât fly back between isles. We donât report or return until we find her kind.â
Rhiâs brows rise to impossible heights. âThat could take a month.â
âOr longer depending on weather,â Maren guesses.
âTheyâll court-martial you,â Sawyer reminds us. âItâs probably the right plan, but you go against direct ordersâ¦â He cocks his head to the side. âThen again, itâs hard to court-martial the squad that comes back with the seventh breed.â
âExcellent point.â Ridoc nods. âDo we still have to take Prince Pompous?â
âYes.â Dain leans forward and braces his forearms on his knees. âSome of the isles wonât talk to us without him. Hedotis immediately comes to mind.â
âThis isâ¦â Bodhiâs eyes narrow on me. âCome down here.â Magic ripples as I cross the sound shield and step down onto the outer cobblestone rings of the pit. âWhatâs going on, Sorrengail? Because Iâm all for fucking rules, ignoring orders, and bucking protocol, but this rushââ
âHis eyes.â I clench my fists and lower my voice to softer than a whisper. âFrom the alloy in Deverelliâ¦the flecks in Xadenâs eyes didnât go back to gold. Theyâre still amber.â We have to find a cure before people start noticing or he worsens.
Bodhiâs features slacken. âShit,â he says quietly. Hope fades from his expression, but I refuse to let it steal mine. âWell, I have what you asked for.â He reaches into his pocket and hands over two vials that have been marked S and A. âI can get more if you want it.â
Serum and Antidote.
âThanks.â I quickly pocket them before anyone can see. âIâm not planning on using them onââ
âIâm just glad you recognize you might have to,â he interrupts.
âWeâll find a cure,â I promise with far more certainty than I feel.
Bodhiâs mouth tightens. âIâd kill to go, but you need to take Garrick with you.â
Neither of us say what he means.
Take Garrick in case you donât.
Someone shouts on the mat, and both our heads jerk in that direction.
Kagiso shoots another blast of fire, sending a shrieking second-year scrambling backward, but Carr doesnât intervene as the flames creep closer and closer to the terrified brunette.
âHelp her,â I whisper.
âIâve been ordered to stand down.â Bodhi tenses as her screams intensify and she drops to her hands and knees.
The next blast of flames comes within inches of her.
âWield!â Carr shouts. âDefend yourself!â
The second-year out of Claw Section splays her hand wide on the mat and screams. Color drains in a circle around her hand, leaving the mat gray.
Oh shit. My stomach clenches and I stare, stunned.
Sheâs turning right in front of us. Or has she been one of them all along? Xaden would have sensed her, right? He was just here. Or would she have sensed him? I palm my dagger.
Gasps and shrieks sound in the stands behind us.
âCarr!â Panchek orders.
The professor moves faster than Iâve ever seen him, brandishing an alloy-hilted dagger and driving it straight through the cadetâs back, into her heart.
Just like that. Sheâs dead. Executed. No questions, no chance to cure her, nothing.
Bodhi shudders. âTake. Garrick.â