Iron Flame: Part 1 – Chapter 14
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
I jolt awake as the scent of something acrid fills my lungs, and I swing my fist, knocking a hand away from my face. Smelling salts.
âSheâs up,â a woman in dark blue announces, backing away to confer with⦠Professor Grady?
My head buzzes as I sit up, stretching my legs in front of me, and immediately reach for Tairn.
My eyes are slow to adjust to the bright light, but it looks like weâre in some sort of forest.
he growls with surprising frustration, like heâs the one whose just been drugged and dragged out of the quadrant.
Rhiannon, Sawyer, and Ridoc are on my right, all looking as confused as I feel. To my left are four second-year riders with Second Squad, Flame Section, Second Wing designations, looking around the forest in bewilderment. Nice to see we arenât the only ones befuddled.
If it was, weâd be dead, especially as fuzzy as I feel.
Oh. Shit.
Can it?
Across from us sit two groups of eight infantry cadetsâif their blue uniforms are any indicationâin hushed conversation. Theyâre allâ¦homogenous. The four men all have the same military-short haircut, cropped close to their skulls in a fade, and the women wear their hair slicked back in tight buns. Same dark-blue uniforms, same boots, sameâ¦everything. Only the name tags above their hearts are different, except for the one with a squad leader designation on their shoulder in each group.
The four of us are all dressed in our summer uniforms, but weâve each made our own modifications. My lightweight black top has slits down the front that give me direct access to the daggers sheathed in my armor at my ribs. Rhiannon prefers a tunic with sheaths directly sewn in. Sawyer likes his sleeves short, weapons strapped to his upper arms, and Ridoc never took the time to see the uniform tailorâhe just ripped his sleeves off. We arenât even name tags, and the same goes for the squad from Second Wing.
The forest floor is soft and muddy in patches, and the afternoon sun streams in between the branches at an angle, which means weâve only been unconscious an hour, maybe two at most. Itâs nothing but trees as far as I can see.
I blink, fighting to bring my brain into sharper focus.
Professor Grady hands each rider a waterskin. âSorry for the abrupt change of scenery. Hydrate.â
We all uncork our skins and drink. The water is crisp and coldâ¦but thereâs something else there, too. Pungent. Earthy. And something bitterly floral that I canât quite place. I close the skin, cringing at the aftertaste. Professor Grady needs to take better care of his skins.
âYou all right?â I ask Rhi, who is checking her sheaths for weapons.
âA little dazed, but yeah. You?â
I nod, running my hands down my sides to make sure my daggers are exactly where I left them. They are. My bag is still strapped to my back, too.
âThey took us in the stairwell?â I look over to see Sawyer rubbing his temples and Ridoc scratching the tattoo on his neck.
âThatâs my last memory.â She nods in agreement, studying the squads next to and across from us.
âAnyone know where we are?â Sawyer asks the obviously more alert infantry squads.
The cadets look over at us, but no one answers. Or speaks at all.
âIâm going to take that as a no,â Ridoc drawls.
âItâs a no from us.â The rider from Second Wing with a squad leader designation lifts his hand in greeting.
I start to say toward Tairn, but the usually crystal-clear connection is muffled, like someone has thrown a blanket over it. Panic clenches my heart as I realize the same is true for Andarna, though I donât risk waking her with questions. âI canât reach Tairn.â
Rhiâs gaze snaps to mine, and she cocks her head to the side. âShit. Feirge, either. It feels like something isâ¦â
âSmothering the connection,â Sawyer finishes.
I set the waterskin down next to me, and the others catch on, doing the same. What in Dunneâs name did we just drink?
âWeâre blocked out,â a rider with a shoulder-length dark-blond braid whispers.
âBreathe, Maribel,â the squad leader orders, shoving his tan hand into his dark curls, like he might actually benefit from that suggestion a little more. âIt canât be for long.â
Ridocâs hands fist. âThis isnât right. I donât give a shit if itâs for the courseâ weâre not supposed to be cut off from them.â
âTomas?â Rhiannon asks, leaning forward to look past me.
âHey, Rhi.â The squad leader waves. âThis is Brisa.â He points to a woman with a shaved head, rich brown skin, and an observant, quick-moving gaze, and she gives us a curt nod. âMirabel.â He swings his finger to the blonde with pronounced flight goggle lines in her pale cheeks and a fire-wielder patch on her shoulder, and she waves. âAnd Cohen,â he finishes. The rider closest to me, with a fast smile, short black hair, and warm russet-brown skin, lifts his hand in greeting.
âHi.â Rhiannon nods. âThis is Sawyer, Ridoc, and Violet.â
The pleasantries are cut short as Professor Grady marks something in a folder and clears his throat. âNow that youâre all awake, welcome to the first joint land navigation exercise.â He pulls two closed maps from the folder. âIn the last two weeks, youâve been taught how to read a map, and today youâll put those skills to use in a practical setting. Were this an actual operation with the makeup of an outpost, this unit would consist of the composition you see here.â
He steps away from a woman who must be the infantry professor, revealing two cadets in pale blue sitting beside a scribe. Their hood is down, and theyâre wearing cream pants with a cream hooded tunicânot robesâbut thatâs definitely a scribe.
âRiders and infantry for fighting, a scribe to record the event, and healers for the obvious reasons.â He motions them forward, and all three move to stand at the end of the infantry lineup.
The infantry professor wearing captain rank walks up and stops beside Professor Grady with impeccable posture. âCadets, rise,â she says.
The infantry squads practically jump to their feet, immediately standing at attention.
I draw back slightly, surprised at my first instinct, which is to tell the infantry captain to fuck off because I donât answer to her. No rider does.
Professor Grady glances our way and nods.
The eight of us stand, but weâre not even . We just are.
The infantry captain looks at us and barely refrains from rolling her eyes. âThis is the shortest course youâll be conquering together this year, so try to get to know one another. Fourth Wing, youâre attached to fourth squad.â She looks around, and one of the cadets directly ahead raises his hand. âAnd Second Wing, youâre attached to second squad, just to make it easy.â A cadet raises her hand on the left. âYour objective is to find the location marked on the maps and secure it. Once you do, youâll be extracted.â
It canât be that easy.
Professor Grady holds out the maps, and Rhiannon steps forward, taking both and handing one to Tomas.
One of the infantry cadets starts to step forward but stills.
âTwo maps,â Professor Grady says. âTwo teams but one cohesive unit. Youâre not used to working together. You werenât even warned you would be. But keeping Navarre safe requires teamwork between the segments of our military. There are times in your careers when youâll need someone you can trust in the air or on the ground, and those bonds are forged here at Basgiath.â He looks between our groups. âWeâll see you tomorrow afternoon.â
Tomorrow afternoon?
My stomach founders. Tairn wonât see Sgaeyl unless he honors my request and leaves. And meâ¦Iâll miss the few hours Xaden is here. It will be another until I can see him. The disappointment hurts more than it should.
âJust find the extraction point and secure it? Thatâs our mission?â Sawyer asks, eyeing the map like it might bite him. This is not his strongest skill, for certain.
âNo problem.â Ridoc puffs out his chest.
âOh. Right,â Professor Grady replies. âYou see, we have to level the playing field a little bit. Infantry has been doing land nav since their first year, so naturally, they might be a little better at it than you.â
Ridoc stiffens.
The infantry cadets smirk.
âAnd you might notice that none of you eightââProfessor Grady looks us overââhas the ability to fully communicate with your dragons.â
âWhich is bullshit,â Ridoc says at full volume.
A woman on the infantry side gawks.
âIt is,â Professor Grady agrees. âItâs not something we do lightly, either, and your dragons loathe it just as much as you do. Youâve all been dosed with a particular mixture of herbs that dulls not only your connections but your signet as well. As frustrating as it is, weâre actually pretty proud of the concoction, so let us know if you feel any side effects.â
âBesides you cutting off the most important bond we have?â Rhi argues.
âPrecisely,â Professor Grady replies.
I reach for my power, but only a tingle fills my fingers. Gods, I feel⦠vulnerable, and it really fucking sucks. My mind flies over what the mixture could possibly be as the two professors walk between our groups.
When Grady reaches the end of our section, he turns, moving backward. âOh, and did I mention that there are two groups of you out here? The other is on the far side of the forest, and while your dragons will be hunting them, their dragons are hunting . A few unbondeds joined, too.â
The fuck? My stomach hollows.
Almost every infantry cadet looks faint, and one wobbles where he stands.
âInfantry, the riders are going to need to lean on your land nav expertise, but you wonât live without them should you encounter a dragon.â Grady looks the eight of us in the eye as he backs away. âTry and see that most of them make it out of here, will you?â He flashes a grin and turns around, walking into the forest with the infantry professor, leaving us in the middle of the fucking woods without supplies or our dragons.
We stare at the infantry squad.
The infantry squad stares at us.
The healers look comically uncomfortable, and the scribe already has a notebook out, pencil at the ready.
âWell, this should be a good time had by all,â Ridoc mutters.
âDid he insinuate that we could die?â the smaller of the healers asks, his olive skin paling.
âPiss off the dragons and find out,â Sawyer replies.
âYouâll be all rightââI look for his name tagââDyre.â I offer him a smile as I pass on my way to the scribe. Soft red hair frames a creamy white face almost overcome with freckles as the short woman blinks up at me with even shorter brown lashes. âAoife? They drag scribes into RSC?â
âHi, Violet. Iâm currently the first in my year training for the field and not to be an adept,â she says. âYouâre the most powerful rider in yours. Dyre and Calvin are the best in their years.â She shrugs. âNaturally they built the strongest team first.â
Ridoc grins. âSo youâre saying weâre the team to beat?â
âSomething like that.â The scribe fights back a smile.
âThen letâs make sure we get beat,â Rhiannon says before turning her attention to the map. âTomas, what do you think?â
He hands a map to Brisa and consults on Rhiâs.
Two hours and several arguments with the infantry later, weâre four miles from our starting location with another six to go. Rhiannon and Ridoc examined our mapâwhich marked where weâd been dropped and our extraction point but didnât label our locationâdiscussed a route with Tomas, made sure we all saw it, and then handed it over to the infantry to agree on a route before we started walking.
âIâm telling you, weâre in the Parchille Forest,â Cadet Assholeâotherwise known as Calvinâargues with Rhiannon a few steps ahead. Heâs actually gone about fifteen minutes without reminding us that heâs their ranking officer, so Iâm sure weâre due any minute now. âThat map doesnât resemble any Iâve ever seen for Shedrick, which means we could be headed the opposite direction we should be. None of these landmarks match.â
âAnd I think youâre wrong,â Rhiannon counters, keeping her tone even.
I think weâre in the Hadden Woods,â Aoife says, holding her journal closely. She already has three pages of notes taken. âItâs the only forest close enough to bring us all by horse, since I doubt your dragons flew us in.â
I add, âItâs also the only forest close enough for Tairn to stay behind and see Sgaeyl without causing either of us pain from the separation.â
âTheir squad leader is the infantry equivalent of Aetos,â Ridoc mutters from my right side.
I nod but keep from chuckling.
Cohen throws his head back on Ridocâs right and doesnât bother suppressing his laugh. Guess Dainâs reputation carries across the wings.
âWho is Aetos?â Cadet Quiet asks from Aoifeâs left. Itâs the first time the curvy brunette has spoken in hours, but her brown eyes are constantly moving, taking in our surroundings. I would bet that sheâs tied with Brisaâwho is covering our flank with Tomas and Sawyerâfor most observant in our group.
âOne of our wingleaders,â I answer. âKind of like your battalion commander.â
âOh.â She nods as Rhiannon and Asshole continue arguing ahead of us. âYou guys function in sections, right?â
âYep.â The landscape hasnât changed. The forest is mostly flat, with a few rolling hills that have been easily scalable. But the heat? Damn, itâs stifling. I tied my uniform top around my waist about an hour ago, leaving me in my armor. I have no idea how Aoife is surviving with her hood up, but she hasnât removed it. âSquad, then section, then wing.â
âWhat do we do if we come across a dragon?â she asks.
âFirst we choose a sacrifice,â Ridoc says. âAnd then we offer it and run.â
Her eyes flare wide.
âDonât be an asshole.â I elbow him in the arm. âDepends on the color, but a good rule of thumb is to lower your eyes and back away,â I tell the infantry cadet. âBut we can usually hear them coming.â
âThen prepare to be digested,â Cohen adds.
âOh ,â the brunette whispers.
âYou are now my favorite year-mate.â Ridoc throws an arm over his shoulder.
âCan I see your map?â Brisa asks from the rear of the formation.
âDonât you have your own?â Calvin retorts.
Rhiâs head whips toward him. âGive it to her or I cut it out of your hands.â
He glares at Rhi but passes it back so we can get it to Brisa.
Gods, this grass is high. Itâs nearly up to my waist in the places where the trees donât shade the ground. I step onto an uneven knob, and my ankle rolls. Ridoc grabs ahold of me before I can fall, then steadies me without a word as we continue the climb. âThank you,â I say softly.
âAre your knees wrapped?â Ridoc asks, concern lining his forehead.
I nod. âYep. Didnât do the ankles, though, since I wasnât exactly expecting a hike.â
âI have cloth if you need to wrap something,â Dyre calls out from behind us.
âIâll keep that in mind, thank you,â I answer.
A guy behind me asks, âAre all scribes this quiet?â
âItâs my job to record, not participate,â she answers.
âNot participating will still get you eaten by a dragon,â he argues.
I assure her, my eyes never leaving his, âIâd never let a get eaten by a dragon.â
Rhiannonâs voice rises as the argument ahead of us heats. âBecause thereâs no way in hell they hauled us out of our rooms and brought us that far away in four hours.â
âBecause your dragons canât fly that quickly?â Calvin is about an inch shorter than Rhi and has no problem glaring up at her.
âBecause our dragons wouldnât carry , dumbass,â Ridoc responds.
Aoife snorts and Mirabel laughs, flanked by the rest of the infantry squad behind us.
Calvin turns and levels a look at Ridoc. âHave some respect for the rank.â He taps his shoulder, where thereâs an open triangle embroidered beneath two oak leaves.
âYour rank means exactly jack and shit to me.â
âWhat, like youâre above us infantry?â Calvin counters.
âI mean technically, when weâre flying weâre above ,â Ridoc argues.
âBut if youâre asking if Iâm better than you, then the answer is obviously yes.â
I sigh and watch Calvinâs hands just in case he decides to go for the shortsword sheathed at his side. Itâs not a bad weapon, but they all carry them. Thereâs no variation for height or specialization. Itâs all soâ¦uniform.
Then again, we were pulled straight out of the hallway, so itâs not like Ridoc is carrying his preferred bow. Sawyer and Rhiannon are missing their favorite swords, too.
âStop pissing him off on purpose,â Rhiannon says, glancing back at Ridoc as we start trudging up another hill. Maybe this one will give us a better vantage point than the last. âWeâre going to need fresh water, or this is going to get ugly fast.â
Ridoc grins. âBut itâs so much fun!â
She arches a brow.
âFine.â He puts his hands up. âIâll let him maintain his delusion of grandeur.â
âOh, so youâll listen to ââ
âSheâs my squad leader. Youâre not.â
âSo, you only respect rider squad leaders,â Calvin prods.
Aoife furiously writes in her notebook.
âShut it, Calvin,â a cadet from behind me says with more than a little exasperation.
âYou want my respect? Earn it.â Ridoc shrugs. âCross the parapet, climb the Gauntlet, survive Threshing, and then weâll be on equal footing.â
âWhat, like we donât go through some shit in the Infantry Quadrant?â someone behind us challenges.
âSee her?â Sawyer says, and I swear I can him pointing at me. âShe bonded not only one of the biggest fucking dragons on the Continent, but a dragon, and then went into combat against the gryphons a couple of months ago and came out alive. You go through that kind of shit in your quadrant?â
The cadets around us fall silent. Even Aoifeâs pencil remains poised above her notebook as she stares at me.
Awkward. And No one in our little group knows what weâre really against out there. And my silence? Itâs starting to feel a lot less like self-preservation and more like Iâm complicit.
âYouâre a Sorrengail, arenât you?â Mirabel asks. âThe commanding generalâs daughter?â She winces. âThe hair kind of gives you away.â
âYes.â Thereâs no use denying it.
âYour mother is terrifying,â she whispers.
The scribe glances between us before putting pencil to parchment again.
I nod. âThatâs one of her more prominent qualities.â
âHey, guys?â Brisa raises her voice behind us. âI think I know why it feels like weâre getting nowhere.â
âWhy is that?â Rhiannon asks over her shoulder.
âCalvinâs right, but so are you. They gave us two different maps,â she says as the first of us crest the hillâ¦and freeze.
Even my heartbeat comes to a standstill as Rhiannon throws up her hand to stop the rest of the group.
An Orange Clubânope, thatâs a Scorpiontailâgrowls at us low in her throat from where sheâs been lying in wait on the other side of the hill. Our heads tilt to follow the movement as she rises to her full height, dominating the skyline, her tail whipping behind her.
Jack Barloweâs dragon. Or at least she was.
âAmari help us,â Calvin whispers, his panic palpable.
I drop my eyes in deference just like Kaori taught us as my pulse leaps and my brain fights the urge to panic. âOranges are the most unpredictable. Eyes down. Do run,â I whisper. âSheâll kill you if you run. Try not to show any fear.â Shit, is what we should have been talking about instead of arguing about which quadrant is superior and which forest weâre in.
My chest tightens when my immediate instinctâto reach for Tairnâis denied. With any other dragon, I would bet against risking the anger of our dragons by torching us, but the cadets behind us are a whole other story. And since I killed Jack last year? All bets are off.
She has nothing to lose, and given the hot blast of steam that levels the grass and makes my face sticky, she remembers exactly who I am.
âRiders!â Rhiannon calls out. âTake the front!â Sheâs obviously thinking the same way. âInfantry, guard the healers and scribe!â She glances at me sideways, careful not to raise her eyes. âViolet, maybe you shouldââ
Keeping my head down, I push past Calvin to stand in the front, catching movement in my peripheral vision. âIâm not hiding.â
âWhat are you doing? Itâs going to eat you,â one of the cadets behind us hisses.
I look over and see a healer, Dyre, a few feet to my right, staring straight at Baide, his mouth agape.
A growl rumbles up the orangeâs throat, and I lunge, gripping the strap of Dyreâs medical pack and yanking him behind us, passing him to Ridoc, who quickly shoves him to safety and moves to my side.
âNo, sheâs not,â Sawyer says, moving forward with Ridoc so the infantry is behind us. âThatâs why weâre taking the front.â
Baide swivels her head, then opens her mouth and curls her tongue, and I chance a quick glance, catching her hazy golden eyes narrowing to slits as she arches her neck, changing her angle instead of lowering her head to strike in the typicalâ
I inhale sharply. âRhi, sheâs going to blast right past us just like Solas.â
Rhi takes less than a second to assess and decide. âSecond Wing,â she calls back. âHalt and cover the infantry where you are!â
Movement behind us ceases as Baide flexes her claws in the ground and swivels again, choosing a target.
âItâs⦠Itâsâ¦â Calvin babbles.
âDrop your eyes and shut up,â Rhi orders.
âGods, they all scared,â Ridoc whispers from my right.
âExactly how pissed at you do you think she is?â Sawyer asks me from Rhiâs left.
âShe dropped a mountain on her rider.â Ridoc sighs like weâre all fucked, and I couldnât agree more.
My heart leaps into my throat as Baide prowls backward, lowering her head to our level. Itâs the perfect angle to torch us, but I resist the urge to look and keep my eyes trained on the grass in front of me.
Hot air gusts in our direction as she scents each of us, starting with Rhiannon and moving to Sawyer. There are a few muffled cries from the infantry cadets as she exhales a dank huff of steam, then breathes in again when directly in front of me.
I fight my racing heart. Last year, I might have accepted death. But this yearâ¦this year, Iâm bonded to one of the deadliest dragons on the Continent.
And while thereâs a good chance Tairn might die if I do, Iâm not sure any dragon is willing to risk his wrath if he doesnât. Baide draws back, then darts forward with an open jaw, snapping her teeth shut directly in front of my nose and pelting my face with saliva.
Holy. Shit.
Someone behind us screams, then fucking âNo! Gwen!â Calvin shouts as Cadet Quiet breaks to the left, sprinting through the grass.
Baideâs head swings, tracking the movement, and my heart sinks as she drops her jaw, the side of her tongue visible ahead of me as it curlsâ
âDown!â Rhi shouts as the other squad leader, Tomas, runs after Gwen, catching her within a few strides and yanking her back by her uniform in the same way Iâd snatched Dyre from the front, all but throwing her at Calvin as we drop as ordered. She stumbles to the ground at Calvinâs feet just as Baideâs nostrils flare.
Heat consumes the air around us at the same second my chest hits the ground, and I close my eyes like that can block out the sounds of screaming behind us.
âThe Northern Esbens are believed to have been the hatching grounds of the orange dragon before unification, though, true to their unpredictable nature, they often chose new valleys in the same range,â I whisper as fire rages past, fighting to keep my heart from seizing.
I havenât known this type of terror since Tairn began channeling, and definitely not since I manifested my signet.
The blast ceases, and Baide snaps her jaws shut, then swings her massive head in front of us one more time before crouching deeply and launching directly over us. I drop my gaze as her poison-barbed tail comes within a foot of me.
And then sheâs gone.
We all scramble to our feet, and riders runâ¦toward nothing. Brisa is the first to reach the charred ground where Tomas had stood. Her hand shakes as she reaches toward the still-smoking earth. My mouth waters as nausea rolls through me, but I keep my breakfast down.
Mirabel isnât as lucky, retching in the grass a few feet away.
âTomasâ¦â Cohen kneels beside Brisa.
Rhi pivots to face the terrified infantry, her fists clenched at her side. âAnd that,â she shouts, âis why you donât fucking !â