Onyx Storm: Chapter 44
Onyx Storm (The Empyrean Book 3)
Your Majesty, unfortunately I can find no law that supersedes the Unification Scrolls. The Provincial Commitment under Queen Alondra the Bold (207.1)âconsolidating the provincesâ armies under the queenâs standard for the Poromish conflictâexpired with the Second Aretia Accord, and control of all forces must return to the provinces from which they hail. I recommend asking for a new Provincial Commitment covering our current conflict.
âUnsent, Drafted Correspondence of Colonel Agatha Mayfair, Royal Archivist Leadership separates us completely after we put our things in our rooms, then questions us for twelve hours each with scribes. When Aetos accidentally lets slip his annoyance that King Tauri is so grateful to have Aaric back that heâs forbidden any form of punishment, the emotional relief results in an immediate sense of overwhelming exhaustion, but I donât ask for a reprieve from the endless debrief. I made the decisions, and if this prolonged interrogation is my only collegiate repercussion, Iâll take it without complaint, especially knowing the other members of the squad are safe, too.
They go over the tripâs details so many times, for so many hours, that I start to worry if theyâre looking for holes in our stories or if they suspect we had more than rare texts to guide us. Itâs tedious and exhausting, but at least I get to see Markhamâs face twist with jealousy from across the room on the few occasions he sits in on my sessions.
Iâve seen things he never will, touched pieces of history he didnât know existed.
Just like my father.
Mira and Garrick are released back to the front on March twenty-eighth, the last day of our inquisition. Drake departs for Cordyn. Brennan arrives from Aretia to mend my ribs. Xaden is hauled into Senarium meetings while being returned to his position as a professor.
And the rest of us go back to class.
For having missed more than three weeks, Iâm only completely lost in physics and mildly confused in history, since all my studying prior to the trip had nothing to do with Braevick absorbing Cygnisen under Porom the First. If not for Rhiâs notes, the three of us would drown academically, and Iâm sure Aaric feels the same about Sloane.
But itâs Battle Brief on our first day back that shows just how much damage can be done in three weeks. Suniva is far from the only city to have fallen. In fact, geographically speaking, itâs an outlier.
âThatâs not possible,â I whisper, staring at the map from my seat. How many dark wielders would it take to cover that much territory this quickly? Rhi and I spent the early morning hours debriefing, but this hadnât come up.
âItâs happening fast.â Rhiannon takes out her pen and paper.
âIf by fast, you mean that half of Krovla has been painted red while we were away, then yes, Iâd say fast is a good term,â Ridoc notes from Rhiâs right.
âYou guys didnât see any of it on your flight in?â Sawyer asks.
âNo.â My grip tightens on my pen. âWe flew over the ruins of Pavis.â There are so many patches of red that they blend into one. Only the southern tip and west of Krovla have been spared. Cordyn still stands, but for how long? âCivilian casualties?â
Rhiâs mouth tightens. âUnknown, and the borders are a mess. People are fleeing in every direction. Draithus is facing major supply shortages. Too many people too fast.â
My stomach knots. Mira and Garrick were both sent to Draithus.
âBecause your king wonât let anyone in.â Cat seethes.
A few heads turn in her direction before quickly looking away. Itâs been like that all day, cadets whispering and staring at us.
âWhat?â I lean forward to look past Maren as the stragglers take their seats. âWeâre still not taking civilians?â
âGuessing they skipped that part of your debrief,â she replies.
Or Iâd only been interviewed by Navarrians.
âWelcome back to our travelers,â Professor Devera says as she takes her position at the front, alongside Professor Kiandra. âFrom my understanding, they have secured us an army of forty thousand soldiers from an alliance with Zehyllna.â She gives me a subtle nod, and I force a smile. âWhich may help turn the tide of this war.â
But we failed to secure our primary objective. And lost a squadmate. Iâm going to need to get back into the gym with Imogen to carry all this fucking guilt.
âIâd settle for a stalemate,â Maren says from my left.
âAlso, welcome to our new guests.â Deveraâs gaze flicks to the two captains in rider black standing watch at the end of Aaricâs row. âPlease make yourselves as uncomfortable as possible.â
Aaric glares past Sloane and Baylor, then faces forward.
âOn to battle strategy,â Devera announces. âWhere should we put our forty thousand troops?â she asks the room, then calls on a first-year from Second Wing.
âThey should be stationed here to protect the wardstone,â the curly-haired guy replies.
âYes, because that is where venin seem to be headed,â Imogen quips from above us.
âNext,â Devera orders.
âThey should be sent to the south to hold the line so Cordyn doesnât fall,â Cat says without being called on.
âThat would be one excellent usage of them,â Devera agrees, âthough I wonder if your bias comes into play with that kind of decision, seeing as itâs now the seat of power for your uncle.â
King Tecarus.
âWhat do our other travelers think?â Devera inquires, her gaze skimming over us.
I stare at the western line thatâs creeping closer to Tyrrendor and keep my mouth closed so the same point canât be made to me regarding bias.
âThey should be split,â Dain answers from above us. âHalf to the south to defend the new king and whatâs left of the territory, and half to the western line.â
âYou would deploy all the troops within Poromiel?â she questions, sitting back on her favorite spot on the table.
âItâs where theyâre needed,â he answers with a certainty I envy. âAnd before the riders in here get defensive, remember that protecting Krovlaâs western line keeps the dark wielders off Tyrrendor and Elsum, and weâre bound by our alliance to defend King Tecarus.â
âAnd it was a flier who paid the cost of that army,â Cat adds.
âSolid points,â Devera admits. âPersonally, Iâd divvy the troops into thirds, putting most along the lines Aetos suggested and the rest at our outposts.â My brow furrows. Why would the outposts need more troops within the wards? âIf we start losing wards, there will be no safe harbor on the Continent.â
âSafe for who, exactly?â Maren mutters.
âHard for outposts to fall or lose wards when theyâre already protected,â Sawyer muses.
Unless they think the arsenals are at risk. All it takes is a disruption in the power supply and the wards will fail.
âWeâll see what leadership decides.â Devera pauses, and her hands trip on the edge of the desk. âIt is not lost on me that todayâs subject will be a sensitive oneâI know many of you had family thereâbut it is critical that we discuss Sunivaâs fall now that the intel reports are in.â
Thereâs an immediate hum of tension within the room, as if half its occupants canât help but channel.
âHow many of you know how it happened?â Deveraâs gaze sweeps over us.
A second-year flier from Third Wing raises her hand, and Devera nods at her. âI donât think any of us have all the details, but we know they were taken by surprise. I heard twenty veninââ
âI heard it was more like thirty,â someone counters from the right.
âWhich is why we have this briefing.â Devera lifts her brows. âIt does us no good to train with misinformation and rumors.â She looks back at the flier.
âThey dropped out of the sky, which made Sunivaâs fifty-foot walls obsolete,â the flier continues, âthen started aâ¦fire. Is it true most everyone burned to death?â
My stomach pitches. I canât think of a more horrible way to die.
âUnfortunately, yes.â Devera nods. âThe fire started in the famous textile district and, with the help of what we think were wind-wielding venin, quickly devoured most of the city, despite the efforts of the four drifts in permanent residence, all of whom perished. We had a riot of four stationed there to protect the queen. One rider and two dragons made it out alive, which is the only reason we have facts instead of rumors to build on. Estimated casualties are somewhere around twenty-five thousand lives.â
Holy shit.
A flier two rows down hangs her head, and her shoulders shake.
âThe fire did most of the work for them,â Devera continues, âallowing their horde of approximately twelve wyvern to split into three coordinated units.â
âThereâs no way twelve wyvern took out Suniva!â a flier to the right yells.
âTwelve wyvern. Twelve venin,â Devera answers without batting an eye. âFour to hold the perimeter, four to fly directly to the palace, and four to concentrate on the barracks and armory. Twelve of them took out twenty-five thousand people. Putting your feelings aside,â Devera instructs, raising her chin, âask the questions that will allow you to hypothetically change the outcome of this loss.â
The room falls quiet, and not a single hand rises.
Twenty-five thousand people. Weâve never studied a modern battle with so many casualties before. How in Amariâs name are we supposed to dissect one that not only killed some of our classmatesâ families but took the life of their queen? It hasnât even been a week.
Devera looks to her right, and Professor Kiandra moves from the edge of the room to the desk in the center of the stage.
âIf we do not rip apart this tactic,â Kiandra lectures, âthey will use it again, and the next town they come for will be yours. Suniva was our kingdomâs capital but our fourth-largest city. You honor the dead by making sure no others fall in the same manner. We have to learn from this. I know itâs hard, but in a matter of months, you third-years will be on the front lines. That will mean you defending Diasyn.â She points to someone above us. âOr youââher finger swings leftââdefending Cordyn.â
âStart asking,â Devera orders. âStart thinking, or weâre all dead.â
âWhat was in the armory?â Xadenâs voice carries over the hall.
I look back and find him standing in the doorway next to Bodhi, his arms folded and jaw locked. My heart leaps. Itâs been three days since Iâve seen him. The beard he grew on the journey home has been shaved, and the name tag is back on his uniform. Instinctively, I reach for the bond, but his shields are up.
His gaze darts to mine and warms for the millisecond he holds contact before we both turn our attention to the front of the room.
âThey have to think for themselves, Professor Riorson.â Devera arches a brow.
âWhat was in the armory?â he repeats.
Kiandra nods. âSix crates of freshly delivered alloy-hilted daggers, and yes, the venin took them all.â
Everyoneâs interest shifts forward, and it takes conscious effort to pick my jaw up. There are maybe two crates kept at each outpost.
âWhy didnât Poromish forces use the damned daggers?â Ridoc asks.
âBecause the damned daggers had only arrived a few hours earlier,â Devera answers. âAnd the armory was the first target hit. Our best guess is that there was simply no time to distribute them.â
âWhy would six crates be sent there?â Caroline Ashton asks.
âSuniva was only supposed to be a distribution site. Drifts were set to take the crates to other cities in the morning,â Kiandra answers.
Shit. The venin knew about the shipment. Thatâs the only logical explanation.
âHow many people knew the distribution schedule?â I ask.
âRight there.â Devera points at me. âThe answer is too many. We have traitors in our ranks.â
My pulse launches. How many Barlowes are out there, hiding among us? Just waiting for their opportunity? The cadet turning in the Signet Sparring pit proved some of us are willing to turn under the right circumstances. Maybe even in this room.
âHow did they get to Suniva without being detected?â Rhiannon asks. âThe area surrounding the city was clear for hundreds of miles. Fliers and our riot had to be on patrol.â
âWhatâs common in Suniva in March?â Kiandra asks in answer.
Fuck if I know. That hasnât exactly been a part of our education to this point.
âThunderstorms,â Kai answers from Aaricâs right. âFrom March until about June, they roll in around five and are gone by midnight.â
Kiandra nods. âThey flew in with the storm.â
âYou mean above it?â a first-year asks.
âNo, dumbass,â another first-year from First Wing counters. âThey canât survive at that altitude.â
âSome storms are low enough to fly over,â Devera corrects, âwhich is why you should pay more attention in class, Payson. In this case, they flew within the cloud.â
Within the cloud? That would require⦠No way. Itâs impossible.
Not with enough years of training.
âThat doesnât make sense,â a third-year calls out from above us. âItâs an unacceptable risk to fly in those conditions unless absolutely necessary due to the prevalence of lightning. Weâre taught that in the first month of flight maneuvers.â
Most of the room mutters in agreement.
âWhich is why the patrols were grounded.â Devera stares at me like she knows what Iâm thinking.
âMaybe they donât give a shit how many wyvern die,â Imogen counters.
My heart races, and I shift my weight in my seat.
âWhatâs wrong?â Rhiannon whispers.
âI know how they did it,â I reply just as quietly, my grip tightening on my pen.
âThen say something,â Rhi prods like itâs first year all over again.
âI donât want to be right,â I reply just as quietly.
âThatâs a first,â Cat mutters.
Devera cocks her head to the side, calling me out without saying a word.
My stomach hollows. Gods, Iâm really going to have to say it.
âTheyâd give a shit about wyverns if theyâre riding them,â the other third-year retorts at Imogen. âThey might not have souls, but they value their lives, and no reasonable rider flies within a thunderstorm.â
âI do.â Fuck, I actually said it.
Every head turns my way, and Devera nods.
âI can direct my strikes within a cloud just like I did during the battle here in December,â I continue. âWhich means I could theoretically control the natural strikes and move a riot within a thunderstorm with relative safetyâ¦after about twenty years of practice.â I abandon my pen on my notebook. Theophanie. âShe was with themâtheir lightning wielder. Iâd guess thatâs how the textile fire started, and probably what took out the other dragons.â
âThatâs what the report suggests,â Devera answers.
Shit. Shit. Shit. âTo do all that after moving a horde through a stormâ¦â I shake my head. âShe has to be a Maven.â And Iâm a fucking second-year who just spent three weeks chasing a mirage of hope on isles without magic when I should have been training.
âMost likely,â Devera agrees, giving me the same look Mira had on Zehyllna: expectation. Then she glances away. âSo now letâs discuss how we defeat this particular assault. What signets could have made the difference? Nothingâs off the table. Who do you send to guard your most valuable targets with this kind of threat?â
âWater wielders could have helped the fire,â someone suggests.
âYou send Riorson,â Caroline Ashton says. âHeâs the most powerful rider we have, and heâs held back more than just a dozen wyvern. If Riorsonâs there, this doesnât happen.â
True, but at what cost? Would he have channeled from the earth to keep it from happening? I glance over my shoulder, but Xaden is already gone.
âDonât we have a fire wielder powerful enough to have controlled the flames?â Baylor asks. âHeâs a major stationed with the Southern Wing.â
âMajor Edorta is stationed at Athebyne,â Devera confirms.
Rhiannon glances sideways at me, then looks away.
âYour turn to say something,â I whisper. âDonât hesitate.â
âNo way. Not even in hypotheticals.â Sawyer shakes his head at Rhi as people call out different signets around us. âYou donât send a cadet againstââ
âYou send Sorrengail,â Rhiannon announces.
ââa Maven,â Sawyer finishes in a whisper. âAnd yet you just did. Godsdamn.â
Cat and Maren both gawk at Rhi, and Sawyer sinks lower in his seat.
âYou said nothing was off the table,â Rhi adds, keeping her eyes forward. âSorrengail could have taken out a chunk of the wyvern on approach by striking into that same cloud, including their lightning wielder, as long as they donât know Violetâs there.â
âAnd if they do?â Devera questions. âRemember that someone told them about the daggers being moved.â
Rhi swallows, and her breaths speed up.
âDo your job.â I whisper the reminder. âItâs just a hypothetical.â
She straightens her spine. âThen Sorrengail needs to be the better of the two.â
And Iâm not. Iâm distracted the rest of the hour, thinking of different tactics I could use to even the playing field between Theophanie and me and coming up empty-handed, with the exception of one fact. She wants me alive.
Battle Brief ends, and we have two precious hours before our next class, which Ridoc uses to cajole Sawyer, Rhi, and me into going down to the Archives.
Not that Sawyer needs much of a push.
âWe really couldnât have waited another couple of days?â I whisper at Ridoc as we walk through the tunnel, passing the stairwell to the interrogation chamber.
Rhi and Sawyer are far too into arguing about her decision to send me off to the front to pay attention.
âNo,â Ridoc says. âWe couldnât. One day, Battle Brief is going to cover how a shadow wielder took out Cordyn, but you wonât be sitting in your seat because they will have already killed you to stop him.â
âNot much of a Battle Brief if you already have the answer.â I flash a fake smile.
âBasgiath was a unique case,â Sawyer argues with Rhi at my left. âWe were defending the school, and we kept the first-years out of it for the very reason you canât just order Violet into battle. They werenât prepared.â
âStop,â I tell him. âItâs her job as a squad leader to see me as an asset and not just her friend.â
âI still think itâs bullshit,â Sawyer mutters as we walk past the scribe on duty at the Archives door.
âItâs war,â Rhiannon reminds him as we reach the table at the front. âAnd I think itâs bullshit you havenât even thought about flying yet.â
Ridoc and I exchange a look of oh shit.
âI canât,â he fires back in a whisper, tapping his cane against his prosthesis. âNot with this thing. Itâs not ready yet.â
Thereâs no need to ask for Jesinia. The class of scribes sitting at their perfectly lined-up desks sends someone running to the back the second they see us.
âYou could ask Sliseag toââ Rhiannon starts.
âSliseag isnât Tairn,â Sawyer hisses. âIâm not about to ask him to make exceptions for meânot when he risked bonding a repeat in the first place.â
A few scribes pick their heads up, then quickly look away.
âYouâd rather spend your time consulting with the retirees?â Rhi counters. âYouâre still a rider, Sawyer.â
âMaybe we should ease up,â Ridoc suggests.
Sawyerâs face flushes. âAll respect, but you have no idea what this is like, Rhi.â
I lean into Rhi just enough to get her attention, then shake my head subtly. âSubject change,â I suggest in a whisper.
Her mouth purses, and she sighs. âWhatâs going on with you and Riorson?â she asks, keeping her voice just as low as mine. âYou didnât so much as smile when you saw him during Battle Brief.â
âHeâs brooding.â I shrug.
âThatâs a word for it,â Ridoc says, pressing down a corner of his ice-wielding patch thatâs come unsewn.
Jesinia emerges from the back of the Archives, holding a small paper bundle tied with twine. She quickly makes her way toward us, immediately gifting Sawyer with a smile as she sets the book-size package on the table and pushes it toward me.
âHi,â he signs, and damn if his grin doesnât tug at the corners of my mouth.
âHi,â she signs, then turns toward us. âYour reports have been fun to read, but itâs good to have you back so you can tell me about the trip in person.â Her gaze meets mine. âThat was delivered for you by courier this morningâI intercepted it before Aetos could open it like he does all of your mail.â
âThank you,â I sign, then pick up the package. Itâs far too soft, too malleable to be a book, and the tag labeled with my name and quadrant is from a seamstress in Chantara.
Weird.
âWe need somewhere private,â Ridoc signs.
Rhiâs brow furrows. âWhatâs going on?â she signs.
âPlease,â Ridoc signs to Jesinia.
She nods, then leads us to one of the private, windowless study rooms that line the front wall of the Archives and motions us inside.
I head in first with Sawyer, and the others follow. âI know Sliseag isnât Tairn,â I whisper as we make our way around to the back of the table. âAnd I also know it can be hard to do things differently, especially in an environment that demands perfection and uniformity.â
âAn environment that produces perfection and uniformity.â Sawyer stiffens, glancing across the table at Rhi and Ridoc as she quizzes him again as to why weâre here.
Oh. I get it now. âFor me, flyingâ¦differently is worth it,â I say under my breath as we sit. âBut whether you feel the same about asking Sliseag for help is a question only you can answer.â
âI think I could keep my seat,â he admits quietly. âMost of that is thigh work. Itâs mounting that intimidates me.â
âAnything I can do to help?â I ask him.
Jesinia peeks through the doorway as if checking to see that we werenât followed, then closes the door.
Sawyer shakes his head. âIâve been working toward the run and making adjustments to the prosthesis for the climb. I just need to get it right, make sure it works before I let myself hope.â His gaze flickers to Rhi.
âYou could never disappoint her,â I rush as Jesinia turns toward us.
âOur friend? Never. Our squad leader?â He grimaces.
âYou shouldnât be in here,â Jesinia signs, âso make it quick before they come kick you out.â
Ridoc leans all the way back in his chair and stares at me.
âWhat is happening?â Rhi signs, looking between the two of us.
âTell them,â Ridoc signs. âOr I will.â
I sigh. Thereâs no point being nervous. Either I trust my friends, or I donât.
âXaden is slowly turning venin,â I say and sign.
Rhiâs eyes widen, and she leans forward. âTalk.â