Onyx Storm: Chapter 57
Onyx Storm (The Empyrean Book 3)
But even harder than taking a life is doing nothing while one is extinguished beside you. Keep your eyes forward, Mira.
âPage seventy-one, the Book of Brennan â
e fly for Draithus. Theyâll attack as soon as they get what they want.â
âAnd leave Sorrengail to die?â
âWho says sheâs even still alive?â
The voices of arguing, armed riders blur as I stand between Xaden and Brennan near the center of the dais, staring at the updated map on the Assembly chamber wall.
âThere are thousands coming up the pass out of the city. If Draithus falls, theyâre all dead.â
âWe have a six-dragon riot stationed thereââ
âTen now that the line has fallen back.â
âDonât forget the nightwing drift.â
âAgainst hundreds of wyvern?â
âAnd at least a dozen dark wielders.â
âWhoever goes isnât coming back from that.â
âThen you send us.â
âWeâre not sending cadets into combat!â
âIt was our dragons who woke us. End of debate. Weâre going!â
I barely hear any of it. Only one thought matters: Theophanie is done waiting for me, and she has Mira.
She has my sister.
And our last words were in anger.
Fear threatens to worm its way past the rage boiling in my blood, and I fight to deny it entry. Mira doesnât have time for my fear. Itâs a four-hour flight to Draithus, and if we donât leave in the next half hour, weâll be too lateânot just for Mira but for the thousands of civilians as well.
How did this happen? A harsh red line on the map spans from what had been the eastern front directly to Draithus. Theyâve surged in the last twenty-four hours, ignoring everything else along their path, concentrating on this one target when easier, comparable cities remain untouched.
âNot all signets are equal. I know sheâs a Maven, but is she more powerful than you?â Brennan folds his arms at my right as the others continue to argue.
âYes,â I answer. Thereâs no point lying.
âWeâll be walking into a trap.â His gaze locks on the flag representing Draithus.
âFlying, and who said you were coming?â I counter. The space between the flag and the Cliffs of Dralor seems impossibly small for so many people to flee, and the climb is hellacious. They wonât all make it.
âSheâs my sister, too,â Brennan states.
He has a point.
Xaden stands silently in front of the throne, his arms crossed as he studies the field to the north of Draithus, where Theophanie has demanded we meet. âWe donât have enough riders to retrieve Mira, defend Draithus, and protect the pass.â
âNo.â Brennan sighs and examines the map more closely. âWeâll have to prioritize an objective. Maybe two.â
Xaden nods.
âWe canât just leave people to die,â I protest.
The arguments between cadets and officers grow louder, and the pit in my stomach deepens. I should be with my squad, but Iâll be damned if I stand patiently and wait for others to decide my sisterâs fate.
âWhat would you do if they were your citizens on the other side of the border?â Cat yells across the room from where our squad stands in loose formation. âOr are you thinking like true Navarrians now that youâre tucked in safe behind your wards?â
A smart-ass captain snaps something back at Cat that I canât hear over the din, and Sloane charges. I nearly jump over the table, but Dain gets there first, hooking his arm around her waist and hauling her back as she swings. The second he sets her on her feet, those fists are aimed in his direction, and I wince as he lets two make contact before trapping her wrists and leaning in low. Whatever he says must register, because she gives a curt nod, then retorts with a glare and walks back into formation, where Rhi is waiting with what looks like a scathing lecture.
Dain lifts his brows at me, and I grimace in apology before he moves to Bodhiâs side.
âHow long are you going to let them fight?â Brennan asks, glancing at Xaden.
âUntil my tactician gives me a plan that doesnât make me choose between objectives,â Xaden answers. âThe volume of their delivery doesnât make their points any less valid.â
âI canât guarantee two, let alone three.â Brennanâs mouth purses.
âLive up to your reputation and try,â Xaden orders.
Brennan curses, then looks over the room. âI need Tavis and Kaori!â he shouts. Both men quickly separate from the crowd and make their way up Brennanâs side of the dais. âHave you been to Draithus?â he asks Kaori.
âOnce.â The professor nods.
âCan you give me a roughly scaled projection of the territory?â
Kaori lifts his hands, and a three-dimensional projection of Draithus and its surrounding areas appears over the table. The room falls quiet as Brennan leans forward, bracing his palms on the table to study the image as Garrick points out where our current defenses stand. The gash on his head and black eye are both gone thanks to Brennan.
The city sits at the southwestern edge of an intermontane plateau that spans a couple dozen miles. Itâs surrounded by peaks on every side and accessible only through a winding series of valleys, the western river that flows south to the Arctile Ocean, or airâwhich Theophanie commands due to her signet. And if Garrickâs reports are accurate, the eastern field is theirs, too.
âWhatever calculations you make, just know that Iâll be going with Violet,â Xaden says.
âI figured,â Brennan answers.
My chest tightens with enough pressure to crush a dragon. âYouâll be risking your life.â
âItâs risked the second you cross the wards, and we both know youâre going after Mira. Iâd rather be at your side than hunting you down after you sneak out.â His jaw flexes.
âTheophanie doesnât want to kill me, or she already would have.â I memorize the topography of the field, feeding the information to Tairn. Between the jagged peaks, lines of forest, and the row of vertical rock formations along the western edge, itâs basically natureâs own fighting pit.
âThatâs exactly what Iâm afraid of,â Xaden replies as Felix and Professor Trissa walk in. âThere are worse things than dying.â
âIs now a good time to point out that Tyrrendor canât afford to lose her duke on what amounts to a death wish?â Felix asks, heading to the front of the dais with Professor Trissa.
âI have no intention of dying,â Xaden replies. âPanchek has already launched to request reinforcements.â
âWhich we know Melgren wonât send. Apparently that late warning was actually an early warning for this,â Trissa counters, keeping her voice level and glancing at me, then Brennan. âIâm sorry for the loss of your sister, but Melgren has already proclaimed this battle a defeat, and heâs never been wrong.â
A lump the size of my conduit forms in my throat. Iâm not giving up on Mira, on any of them. âChoice determines our future. Melgrenâs only seen the outcome of one path.â I glance at Xaden. âWhich couldnât have had three rebellion relics.â
âCadets belong in formation, not battle planning,â Trissa snaps at me.
My spine stiffens, and my hands grip the edge of the table.
âShe stands at my side.â Xadenâs voice drops into that lethally calm wingleader tone, and he places his warm hand over mine. âRemember that.â
The compliment and the pressure of it arenât lost on me.
âStarting to understand the consort missive,â Brennan mutters under his breath, then looks at the model from a different angle. âWe lose if we only take the officers.â
âAbsolutely no cadets.â Felix shakes his head. âNot after what happened last time. Weâre still repairing the walls from when those two went rogue.â He looks my way.
Xaden glances toward my squad, his gaze lingering on Imogen, then Sloane, then Bodhi.
âMake a different choice, get a different outcome,â Garrick suggests. âTheyâll have to live with themselves, so let them make their choice, too. Gods know we did.â
âOnly volunteers. First-years stay behind the wards,â Xaden orders.
âPut us where you need us,â Bodhi calls out, then glances at Dain. âWith the permission of our wingleader, of course.â
âGiven,â Dain agrees.
Rhi takes count of every hand in the air, which is all of them. âSecond Squad stands ready.â
âThis cannot be happening,â Trissa argues.
âIt is.â Xadenâs tone doesnât invite interpretation. âThe Assembly wanted me in that chair, and now youâll deal with my decisions while in it.â
âYouâre not ready.â Felix shoots the insult my way.
âEven if Draithus and fleeing civilians werenât under direct threat, sheâs my sister. Iâm going to do everything I can to rescue her.â I lift my chin.
âOur sister,â Brennan corrects, studying me with a tilted head. âWhich means that dark wielder knows way more about us than we do her.â
Xaden looks toward the back of my squadâs formation, where Bodhi stands with Dain. âGarrick, tell me exactly what her demand was. Why does she want Bodhi?â
âI donât know.â Garrick scratches the stubble along his chin. âShe said to bring Violet and your brother, and theyâll let Draithus stand.â
Stand or live? Anca was standing when they left it, too.
Xaden tenses. âShe said âbrotherâ?â
Garrick nods. âEveryone knows you were raised together.â
âItâs certainly the fastest way to wipe out Tyrrendorâs ruling line,â Trissa notes.
âRight.â Two furrows appear between Xadenâs brows, and his mouth tenses.
âWhat are you thinking?â I ask.
âVenin donât care about succession.â
âYou have another who calls you by the name,â Sgaeyl chimes in, her words sharper than her teeth.
âAnotherââ I frown. The only other person who would have qualified for that title was Liam. Wait. The very first time I met her, she didnât kill me, but she didnât achieve her rescue objective, either. My stomach hollows. âShe wants Jack.â
âThatâs my guess.â His gaze darts to Kaori, whoâs solely focused on his projection, then jumps to Garrick. âYou up for a little walk?â he asks quietly.
Garrick glances at Kaori, then nods.
âUse me,â I whisper to Brennan so Xaden wonât hear. âOnce I rescue Mira, Iâll station myself between the pass and Draithus. I can wield in both directions if wyvern get past me.â
âThatâs it.â Brennanâs eyes slide shut. âEveryone but the seven of us out. Now,â he orders, his voice booming through the room. âStay in the hallway for quick recall.â
âWe donât have time for this,â Felix argues as the crowd moves into the hallway.
âYouâre the variable Iâm missing, and worse, you make Riorson one, too.â Brennan swings his gaze to mine as the Assembly chamber empties.
I draw back. âIâm sorry?â
âTread carefully,â Xaden warns.
âThat right there, for starters.â Brennan stares at me while pointing at Xaden, and I donât think heâs just talking about this discussion. He gestures to the model. âViolet, pick one objective to win.â
âPeople will die if we only choose one.â My heart starts to pound.
âYes.â He nods. âWelcome to leadership.â
âWhy me?â I stare at the model. Mira has to come first, but the thought of leaving civilians to be desiccated, our own riders and fliers to die with their bonded ones? Itâs too much to fathom. Losing Liam was battle. Mom was her own sacrifice. Trager wasâ¦luck. Being responsible for the deaths of thousands?
âBecause I donât think you can,â Brennan answers gently. âTheophanie knows youâll try to save everyone like you did in Resson, or at Dunneâs temple, or Basgiath before Momâ¦â He swallows. âThatâs why weâll fail. Because you will choose everyone over yourself, and he will choose you over everyone.â
My stomach hollows.
âYouâre not playing fair,â Xaden replies, his voice sliding lower.
âIn all the years weâve known each other, fair isnât a term Iâve ever heard you argue.â Brennan holds up a single finger. âProve me wrong so we can go get our sister, Violet. The only way weâre walking out of the trap this dark wielder designed for you is if you donât fall for it. One objective. One path.â He lifts his brows, and the words hit me square in the stomach.
Tairn would select one in a heartbeat.
Andarna would choose them all.
But sheâs gone. Whatâs the objective with the biggest impact? Setting Xaden asideâ¦Draithus will only hold as long as we can defend it. The same goes for the pass. And if I rescue Mira, thereâs every chance Theophanie willâ
This isnât about Mira. Sheâs hunting me.
âTheophanie.â I take a steadying breath. âI guess I would kill Theophanie.â
âIâm impressed. That was not on my list.â The table creaks as Brennan sits on its edge. âAnd if Cadet Sorrengail is abducted while securing her objective?â
Shadows spread at Xadenâs feet. âBodhi will make an excellent duke.â
âAt least one of you can be taught.â Brennan rubs the scar on his palm. âDo you trust your squad leader to hold a position this time?â he asks me.
âWith my life,â I answer instantly.
âAll right.â Brennan nods. âI have one idea.â He looks at us all in turn. âIâll unlock the armory. Trissa, we need you to open up that little cache you keep of runes and maorsite arrowheads. Xaden, we need you to trust Violet not to get herself killed.â He doesnât wait for Xadenâs response before staring me down. âAnd above all else, we need you to understand that you cannot save everyone and you cannot stray from your orders.â
Iâll do whatever it takes to save Mira. âFine.â