Iron Flame: Part 1 – Chapter 18
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
âYouâre early!â I blurt when Xaden opens my door Saturday morning to find me on the floor of my room, surrounded by every history text I own and the two Jesinia loaned me.
Shit, Iâm supposed to meet her in less than an hour.
He blinks and shuts the door behind him. âHello to you, too.â
âHi,â I respond, my voice softening. The elation of seeing him is tempered by the shadows under his eyes. âSorry, I just wasnât expecting you to make it until noon, if they even let you come andâ You lookâ¦exhausted.â Even his movements are slower. Not by much, but I notice.
âThatâs what every man wants to hear.â He sets his swords by the door and drops his pack right next to them. Like itâs where they go. Like this room is partly his, too. Like his room at Samara feels like itâs mine. Neither of us has ever asked for separate quarters.
Maybe I canât fully trust him, but I also canât stand to be away from him.
âI didnât say you arenât beautiful. I implied that you need a nap.â I nod toward my empty bed. âYou should sleep.â
His slow smile stops my heart. âYou think Iâm beautiful?â
âLike you donât already know that.â I roll my eyes and flip the page in , averting my gaze. âI also think you smell like youâve been flying for twelve hours.â Itâs not exactly true, but maybe it will check the already enormous ego I just inflated.
âGods, I missed you.â He laughs and rips off his flight jacket, revealing the short sleeves of his summer uniform and indecently toned arms.
I breathe through the impulse to forget every single worry for a couple of hours by laying out over this floor and try like hell to concentrate on the text in front of me.
âThink anyone will report me for using the bathing chamber?â Heâs already rummaging through his pack.
âI donât think anyone would report you for cold-blooded murder around here, let alone taking a bath.â
âLieutenants arenât exactly supposed to be sleeping in cadetsâ quarters when they visit,â he tells me. âWeâre breaking a few rules.â
âNever bothered you before.â Letting his assumption that heâs sleeping here slide, I glance up from the book and immediately regret it when I see that heâs shirtless. Gods help me if he strips off anything else.
âDidnât say it bothered me now.â He stands, his arms full of fresh clothes from his pack. âJust donât want to see you punished for my actions. I thought they were going to find a way to send you on maneuvers today, or just lock you away.â
âMe too.â Awareness spreads through every part of my body as I lock eyes with him. âIâm sure theyâll find a dark cellar for you next week, so we should try to enjoy this one.â
âYou and I have different definitions of the word âenjoy.ââ He gestures to the books scattered on my floor.
âNot really.â I scan the page quickly and flip to the next. âI think spending the day tangled up in that bed together would be , but since you drew your line, here I am with boring, sexless books.â
âSay those three little words, and Iâll have you naked in .â He looks at me with so much heat that I do a double take when I glance up, my breath catching.
âI want you.â All day. Every day.
He slides into my mind like a caress.
âWell, those are the words you get without full disclosure.â I rip my gaze away. âAnd itâs just us in here.â
âHmmm.â He gives me a look I canât decipher. âIâll be right back.â
âYou donât really smell,â I whisper, loath to let him out of my sight for even a second.
âGet any closer, and youâll take that back.â He leaves, and I do my best to concentrate on the book in front of me and not the thought that heâs about to be naked down the hall.
All I have to do is be honest with him about how I feel, and I can have him. His body, at least. But isnât that all I really had before? Ironic that itâs my truthfulness that can put me out of my own misery when itâs his candor I crave. I guess in that way, weâre alike, both wanting more than the other person is willing to risk.
A few minutes later, he walks back in and the room feels instantly smaller, or maybe itâs the jump in my heart rate making it feel harder to breathe and not the lack of air.
âThat was quick.â Iâve only read another twenty pages or so but I donât bother hiding the two books I need to return. Itâs not like heâd know which are mine and which are borrowed. The less I have to hide, the better.
âI could make so many innuendos, but Iâll refrain.â He tosses his things into his pack, then sinks into the armchair and leans forward, bracing his forearms on spread knees. He picks a book up off the floor. âWhere are all the books from? You didnât have this many last year.â
âMostly from my old room in the main college.â I skim the current page and sigh. This book is mostly scribe-centric stories about the Great War that are heavily redacted, with one vague passage about discovering the ability to extend the wards. âI crated them before Parapet and thought my mother would have shipped them off to storage, but it appears she is more sentimental than Mira or I thought. They were right where I left them.â It had been a surprising discovery. Nothing had been touched in my old room, like I was expected back at any minute. âReally, you should get some sleep.â
Jesinia will be pissed if I miss our appointment.
â
,â he reads from the spine.
âThat one wasnât as useful as I thought it would be the first time I read it,â I joke.
âI would say not.â He sets the book down and then tilts his head, reading the book I have open in front of me. â
.â
âYes.â My pulse leaps, and my stomach gets the same weightless feeling that usually comes when Tairn makes a steep dive. I should have hidden the damned books.
Tairn interjects.
âA class assignment?â Xadenâs eyes narrow when I donât answer.
âFor research.â For some reason I canât fathom, I draw the line at outright lying to him.
âI donât remember anything about the First Six beingâ¦â A tick of his jaw later, his gaze jumps to mine. âYouâre hiding something from me.â
He knows. Or he guesses. That was fast.
âViolet?â Itâs practically a growl. He definitely knows. âWhy are you researching the First Six?â
âFor Aretia.â I shut the book. Thereâs nothing in it thatâs going to help, anyway.
Xaden draws a deep breath, and shadows extend from under the chair, rolling over his feet like a dark fog.
âFor you, really.â The admission is soft.
He stills so completely that Iâm not sure heâs even breathing.
âBrennan told you we have a wardstone.â His words are clipped, controlled. The shadows begin moving like hands, gathering all the books around me but the one Iâm holding and stacking them. âIâm going to fucking kill him.â
âWhy? Because heâs more forthcoming with me than are?â I close the book. âRelax, itâs not like he gave me your journal or something.â
âI donât keep one, but that would have been far preferable,â he snaps. âDigging around for information on Navarreâs most classified defense will get you killed.â
âCivilians are fleeing for our borders, no one in Navarre knows the truth, and Aretia needs to defend itselfâto protect the people Iâm guessing youâre prepared to take in when venin inevitably reach Tyrrendor.â I clutch the old tome to my chest. âYou going to take people in, arenât you?â
âOf course we are.â
âGood.â At least my faith isnât misplaced. I glance over my shoulder at the clock on my desk. Twenty minutes until I have to return the book.
âBut itâs weapons that are going to defend Tyrrendor.â
âI beg to differ, and Iâll keep researching until I figure out how the First Six put these wards in place so we can duplicate the process in Aretia.â I tilt my chin at him.
âNo one knows how it was originally done, only how to maintain them.â He rises from the chair, and his shadows follow as he paces, a barometer for his mood. âItâs a lost magic, and you canât deny that it was probably on purpose.â
âSomeone knows,â I counter, tracking his movements. âThereâs no chance that someone didnât leave a record somewhere in case they fail. We arenât going to destroy the only thing that could save us. We would hide it, but we wouldnât destroy it.â
âAnd how the hell do you propose finding that record without letting the scribes know what youâre up to?â he challenges, turning at the edge of my bed with his hands laced behind his neck and pinning me with a stare that might have sent me running last year.
The click of my teeth is audible as I snap my mouth shut.
He takes one deep breath, then another, closing his eyes. âThe book youâre clutching like a newborn. Itâs not one of yours, is it?â
âItâs currently in my possession.â
âViolet.â I can practically feel him counting to ten in his head for patience.
âFine. I borrowed it from the Archives. Are you really going to yell at me for trying to help?â
âWho knows?â The question is so soft that I almost wish he would just yell. Heâs always at his most lethal when heâs calm like this.
âA friend.â
His eyes snap open. âThereâs a reason we donât fuck around in the Archives. Thatâs the beating heart of the enemy.â His gaze bores into mine. âWe donât have any friends there.â
âWell, I do.â I stand slowly. âAnd Iâm going to be late to return the book if I donât head down there now. So why donât you get some sleep while Iââ
âIâm coming with you.â
âThe hell you are.â I slip the book into the borrowed bag. âYouâll scare her witless. I havenât told her anything about you, or Aretia, or whatâs going on outside our borders, so relax.â
Go figure, he doesnât. âShe just knows youâre researching classified material. Iâm not going to knowing that youâve put yourself in danger.â
âYouâre in danger every single day.â Anger flushes my skin.
Someone knocks on the door, and he sighs before jerking it open.
âOh!â Rhiannon steps back, almost bumping into Ridoc. âI didnât realize you were here today, Lieutenant Riorson.â She glances over at me. âVi, we were going to ask if you wanted to come to Chantara with usââ
âSheâs busy,â Xaden responds, clasping my hand.
âDonât be an ass.â I yank my hand from his.
âWhoa.â Ridocâs eyebrows rise as I turn toward Xaden.
everything I glare into the depths of his soul.
He leans down, bringing his face within a breath of mine.
My jaw drops.
He winces.
exactly I grip the strap of the bag to keep from jabbing him in the chest with my finger. How fucking he.
you The tension in his eyes, his posture, his tone equals mine.
âWhat the hell is going on?â Sawyer asks from the hallway.
âIâ¦uhâ¦â Ridoc scratches the top of his head. âI think theyâre fighting.â
Xaden questions.
âTheyâre not evenâ¦speaking,â Rhiannon mutters.
shit He draws back like Iâve hit him.
âSorry, guys.â I turn to my friends. âTrust me, thereâs nothing I would rather do than go to Chantara with you, but unfortunately, I have to run an errand. Next weekend?â
âYouâll be in Samara.â Xaden folds his arms across his chest.
How is it possible to both love someone and loathe them all in the same moment?
Rhiannon looks between the two of us, then settles her attention on me. âThen the weekend after,â she suggests quietly.
I nod.
Her brow knits in wordless question.
âIâm fine. I promise. You guys have a great time.â I force a smile. âIâll let you know if I need your help burying a body later.â
Ridoc sputters into a cough, and Sawyer pounds him on the back.
âI think she might mean you,â Rhiannon says as she gives Xaden an arch look.
âIâm certain she does.â
âLetâs go,â Sawyer says, leading the three of them out of the doorway.
âIâll do it, too,â Rhiannon says over her shoulder. âIâve never moved anything as big as you, but I bet my signet could put you in the ground without even disturbing the dirt if Iâm pissed enough.â She shoots a look at him before walking down the hallway.
Xaden sighs and closes the door. âYou have some loyal friends.â
âI do,â I agree. âJust remember you said that when it comes time to tell them whatâs going on under their noses.â
His answer is barely a grunt.
âI have to goââ
âIâm pissed that you hid it from me,â he interrupts. âBut Iâm livid that youâve put your life at risk me. Thatâs not something I can handle.â
âItâs not at risk. I can trust her.â I reach for the door handle, and he steps aside. His mouth tightens with anger, but itâs the flash of fear in his eyes that makes me pause. If I had a way of knowing he was just a little safer in Samara, I would want it. Even if heâs being an ass. âFine. You can come with me if you agree to scare her.â
âI canât control her feelings.â He scoffs.
I arch a single brow.
âI just want to meet her.â He lifts his hands, palms outward.
âSo you can see if sheâs trustworthy? By looking at her? Even you arenât that powerful.â I open the door and step out into the hallway. âLetâs go.â
He walks out after me, pulling the door closed.
âYour ego really is boundless.â We start down the hall and turn right into the central corridor.
He puts his hand on the small of my back when we pass a group of cadets.
Waitâ¦is that hurt in his voice? I hate the way my ire dulls. Itâs easier to live in the anger.
We head down the central staircase, winding our way past the ground floor, where most cadets branch off, and into the sublevel of the quadrant.
Itâs a maze of tunnels down here, but I know my way well enough.
âYou would never sit here and do nothing when you could help. Asking me to do differently is justâ¦insulting,â I whisper to him once I know weâre alone in the tunnels. âIâm smart enough to handle myself in the Archives.â
âI never said you werenât brilliant. I never even said your plan wasnât brilliant. I said youâre putting yourself in danger and Iâm just asking you to be honest with me.â Mage lights flicker on as we make our way toward the covered bridge that spans the canyon between the Riders Quadrant and the main college. âVarrish pushed you to near-fucking-burnout, and you didnât tell me that, either.â His jaw works. âOr that you wielded in the middle of the courtyard after Battle Brief.â
âHow did you know?â I hadnât mentioned Varrish in the letter Iâd left for him.
âYou didnât think Bodhi would tell me?â His shadows stream forward, opening the door, and we head across the enclosed bridge. I donât think Iâll ever get used to the casual way he uses his power.
âI hoped he wouldnât,â I admit.
âThatâs the shit you need to tell me, Violet.â
âWhat would you have done? Flown back here and killed him? Heâs the vice commandant.â
âI debated it.â He opens the next set of doors the same way.
âBodhi has miraculously found reasons for our squad to miss maneuvers,â I tell him as we walk into the main campus, passing the infirmary.
âAnd how long is going to work? Weâre twice as likely to find a solution if you tell me whatâs goingââ Xadenâs head snaps forward and he grabs me by the waist, stopping in the middle of the hallway.
But weâve already been seen.
I point out but raise them anyway as guilt nips at me for letting them fall in the first place. I keep hoping for the moment Xaden promises is coming, where itâs second nature, but so far, itâs maximum effort to keep them in place.
âNolon?â My jaw drops at how much weight the mender has lost. His skin hangs as loosely as his black uniform, and his eyes are missing their usual spark when he tries to smile at me.
âViolet. Itâs good to see you.â He glances at Xaden, his gaze falling to the arm wrapped protectively around my waist. âDid you draw back because youâre under the assumption that Iâm going to harm the young woman Iâve been mending for the last six years, Riorson? Or is it that you think no one knows that you two spend all your time together on the days either of you has leave? Because I assure you, I would never endanger Violet, and already knows.â
I step out of Xadenâs arms. âWhat are you doing standing in the middle of the hallway? You look like youâre ready to drop.â
Clearly, I need better shields if itâs that easy for Xaden to slip in again.
âWaiting for someone.â Nolon scratches a few daysâ growth of beard on his jaw. âAnd I suppose I could use some rest. Itâs hard work, mending a soul. Been at it for months now.â His smile lifts on one side, but I canât tell if heâs joking or not. âYouâve been well so far this year? I havenât been called to mend you.â
âIâm all right. I subluxated my shoulder a couple of weeks ago andââ I donât know if heâs as close to Varrish as my friends have hypothesized. The thought gives me pause and keeps me from mentioning the burnout. âAnd Iâve been really good about keeping my knees wrapped. No broken bones yet, either.â
âGood.â Nolon nods as the door behind us opens. âThatâs good.â
âIâm here!â Caroline Ashton races forward, passing us on the left. âSorry Iâm late!â
âPunctuality is appreciated,â Nolon lectures her before looking my way. âDo us both a favor and stay healthy, Violet.â
âI will,â I promise.
Caroline shoots a quick glare in my direction, and they disappear into the infirmary, the door closing softly behind them.
âShe didnât look hurt,â I note as Xaden and I start toward the Archives again.
âNo, she didnât,â Xaden agrees. âMust be visiting another cadet from First Wing. Nolon looks like heâs about to burn out himself. Have there been more injuries than usual?â
âNot that Iâm aware of. Ridoc thinks theyâre using Nolon for interrogations.â My face crinkles. âBut Iâm not sure if he was serious or not. Itâs hard to tell with Ridoc.â
âHmm.â Thatâs all he says as we descend, the tunnels slanting downward toward the lowest point of Basgiath. The deeper we go, the cooler the air becomes, and the sharper a pang I recognize as grief resonates in my chest.
âWhat are you thinking? Your face just fell,â Xaden notes quietly as we pass by the stairs that lead up to the main campus.
âNothing.â
âYou canât expect more than one-word answers from me and not give the same.â
He has a point.
âMy father loved this place. He was ecstatic when my mother was assigned here because it meant that heâd have the full resources of the Archives.â I smile at the memory. âNot that he didnât love maintaining the records and libraries at the outposts we were stationed at, but to a scribe, this place is the pinnacle of a career. Itâs their temple.â We round the last curve, bringing the vault-style door into view. The circular entrance is ten feet across and guarded by a singular scribe, whoâs asleep in his chair.
âA well-guarded one.â Xaden shoots a disgusted look at the sleeping scribe.
âPromise me youâll be on your best behavior.â I grip his elbow so he knows I mean it.
I narrow my eyes.
The Fables of the Barren I tell him as we cross into the Archives.
His jaw flexes, and he breathes deeply when we reach the table. The Archives are empty again, thank Zihnal, but thatâs why Jesinia chose Saturdays.
He remains silent as Jesinia approaches, her gaze widening as she looks between us.
Her steps slow.
âHeâs with me,â I sign, offering a smile.
âDid you find what you were looking for?â she signs back, nervously biting her lip, her focus darting to Xaden.
âNo.â I hand the bag over to her, and she slings the strap over her shoulder. âTheyâre all too recentâ¦and vague.â
Her lips purse in thought.
âMaybe we should shift to something about the history of wards in general?â I suggest.
âGive me a couple of minutes. I have an idea.â
âThank you for helping us,â Xaden signs.
Jesinia nods, then disappears into the rows of bookshelves.
âYou can sign,â I whisper at him.
âYou speak Tyrrish,â he replies. âOne is far less common than the other.â
We stand there in awkward silence, our argument still festeringâat least on my part. I never know how heâs feeling, which is one of our problems. By using that one word with Jesiniaâ
âheâs linked himself to me. If she turns me in, heâll be dragged down, too.
âTry these two,â Jesinia signs when she returns, then hands over the bag. âAlso, I returned yours. Thank you for letting me read it.â
âWhat did you think about it?â I ask, unnervingly aware that Xaden is watching.
Whatever she says next will seal her fate with him.
âSolid folklore with good stories.â She tilts her head to the side. âIt was a limited printing, clearly done on a press, but not so limited that there wouldnât have been one submitted to the Archives at publication.â The look she gives me is full of expectation. âItâs anâ¦odd subject matter to leave out of the Archives, donât you think?â
I swallow hard. âI do.â
Xaden tenses beside me.
âAs I said,â she continues. âIntriguing. Iâll see you Saturday after next?â
I nod, and we leave after thanking her again, passing Nasya, who has started to snore in his seat.
Weâre halfway through the tunnels before Xaden speaks.
Guess the argument is still festering inside him, too.
The Fables of the Barren Thereâs no point lying to him.
Xadenâs head slants in my direction, and he stops in the middle of the tunnel, grasping my elbow gently as fear flashes in his eyes.
Anger burns in his eyes.
I grip the strap of the bag a little tighter.
Says the man whoâs never so much as told me he loves me. If he does. Gods, Iâm so sick of having to make the first move when it comes to this man. And today isnât the day to open myself up to that rejection, too.
your âI gesture between usâ
me I take a step backward.
you Shadow curl around his ankles, following him as he pivots, heading up the tunnel.
Heâs heading off on revolution business, no doubt, and leaving me behind. Again.
âThatâs all you have to say?â I call out, frustration locking my muscles.
âNo good can come of the things I want to say right now, Violet,â he says over his shoulder. âSo, instead of digging a deeper hole with words Iâll regret later, Iâm going to take some space and do something productive, because this isnât.â
Itâs on the tip of my tongue to tell him that he doesnât get to choose when we have a fight, but he asked for space, and I can do the mature thing and give it to him.
When I wake in the morning, the other half of my bed hasnât been slept in and his things are gone. I canât stop my chest from tightening at the thought that heâs headed back to the front lines, that either of us could be killed at any moment, and the last words we said to each other were in anger.