Iron Flame: Part 1 – Chapter 21
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
Iâve decided rolling dismounts might be the death of me yet.
Thursday morning begins with my arm in a sling thatâs secured around my ribs with a strap, immobilizing my shoulder, thanks to yesterdayâs maneuvers. Turns out Tairn was right, and though Iâm capable of making it to his shoulder, my body doesnât take the impact of the actual landing very well. We both agreed this timeâaccommodations will need to be made before graduation.
âHow is it feeling today?â Rhiannon asks as we walk into the history class we share with Third Wing on the second floor.
âLike Tairn set me down and I just kept going,â I answer. âItâs not my first sprain. Healers say it should be about four weeks in the sling. Iâm giving it two. Maybe.â Iâll be the first on the challenge board after Threshing if I give it much longer than that.
âYou could ask Nolonââ Ridoc starts, then stops when he sees the look on my face. âWhat? Donât tell me Varrish wonât let you get mended.â
âNot that Iâm aware of, no,â I counter as we find our seats. âI put my name on Nolonâs list, but I was told he likely wouldnât have an opening before it healed naturally.â
Rhi shoots me a look that says told-you-so but I just give my head a quick shake. This is not the place to explore her conspiracy theoriesâeven if theyâre starting to feel more and more like there might be some truth to them. Iâve never known a mender with a waiting list Thursdays are my second favorite day of the week. No maneuvers, no RSC, no physics. I unload the heavy textbook and the notes I took on todayâs assigned reading, which is more like review for me. There hasnât been a single thing in this class I hadnât already studied with my father or Markhamâor that I donât have trouble believing is true now.
Then I take out a few strips of the bright blue fabric Xaden left me and put them in my lap. Iâve got two of the knots in the book down already, and Iâm determined to have two more by the time he gets here on Saturday. Itâs a ridiculous thing to challenge me on, but that doesnât mean Iâm willing to lose. Even a sling wonât stop me.
âWonder whoâs actually here to teach,â Sawyer says, stepping over the back of his chair from the row behind us and sitting next to Ridoc on my left. âPretty sure I just saw most of the leadership making a run for the flight field.â
My heart stops. âWhat?â Only a major attack would empty Basgiath of leadership. I turn in my seat to look out the window behind us, but the view of the courtyard isnât helping.
âThey were running.â Sawyer makes a running motion with his first two fingers. âThatâs all I know.â
âGood morning.â Professor Devera walks in, her smile tight as she passes three rows of tables and chairs to get to the front of the room. âIâll be filling in for Professor Levini. He was called away due to an attack on the Eastern Wing.â She makes a quick study of his cluttered desk, then picks up the book on top. âYouâll hear about it in Battle Brief tomorrow, but so far thereâs only one death.â Her throat works before she looks up from the book. âMasen Sanborn. Some of you may have known him, since heâs a recent graduate.â
Oh my gods, . His face flashes through my mind, smiling as he pushes his glasses up his nose. It could be coincidence. Thereâs no logical way an attack would be used to cover up a single deathâ¦right?
âUnless they assassinated him the attack,â I mumble under my breath. We werenât even friends. I didnât even know him that well, but out of the ten of us who flew into Resson, now only six are still alive.
âWhat?â Rhi leans into my space. âViolet?â
I blink quickly and clutch the fabric in my lap. âItâs nothing.â
Rhiâs brows lower, but she sits back in her seat.
âI see he has you discussing the second Cygni incursion from year 328.â Devera rubs the back of her neck. âBut I honestly donât see how that has any practical application.â
âThat makes most of us,â Ridoc comments, tapping his pen against his textbook, and those around us chuckle.
âBut just to say we did,â Devera continues, running a hand up and down a faded scar marring the warm brown skin on her upper arm. âEveryone should know that the end result of the four-day temper tantrum was Cygnisen being absorbed into the Kingdom of Poromiel, where theyâve been for the last three hundred years. History and current events are tied because one influences the other.â She glances up at the map on the wall thatâs about a fifth of the size of the one in the briefing room. âCan anyone tell me the differences between Poromielâs provinces and ours?â
The room is quiet.
âThis is important, cadets.â Devera moves to the front of Professor Leviniâs desk and leans back against it. When no one answers, she gives me an arch look.
âPoromielâs provinces maintain their individual cultural identities,â I answer. âSomeone from Cygnisen is more likely to label themselves as a Cygni instead of Poromish. As opposed to our provinces, who unified under the protection of the first wards, chose the common language, and blended the cultures of all six provinces into one cohesive kingdom.â I recite it nearly verbatim from Markhamâs book.
âExcept Tyrrendor,â someone from the left remarks. Third Wing. âThey never quite got the âunifiedâ message, did they?â
My stomach sinks.
.
âNo.â Devera points her finger at the guy. âThatâs what weâre not going to do. Itâs comments like that that threaten the unity of Navarre. Now, Sorrengail brought up a good point that I think some of you are missing. Navarre chose the common language, but who was it common to?â She calls on someone from Tail Section.
âThe Calldyr, Deaconshire, and Elsum provinces,â the woman answers.
âCorrect.â Deveraâs gaze sweeps over us just like it does in Battle Brief when she expects us to not only think through the answers but come up with the questions ourselves. âWhich means what?â
âThe Luceras, Morraine, and Tyrrendor provinces lost their languages,â Sawyer answers, shifting in his seat. Heâs from Luceras, along the bitterly cold northwestern coastline. âTechnically they them up willingly for the good of the Unification, but other than a few words here and there being assimilated, theyâre dead languages.â
âCorrect. There is always a cost,â Devera says, enunciating every word. âThat doesnât mean itâs not worth it, but not being aware of the price we pay to live under the protection of the wards is how rebellions happen. Tell me what the other costs have been.â She folds her arms and waits. âCome on. Iâm not telling you to commit treason. Iâm asking for historical facts in a history class of second-year riders. What was sacrificed in the Unification?â
âTravel,â someone from Claw Section answers. âWeâre safe here, but weâre not welcome beyond our borders.â
Nor is anyone welcome past ours.
âGood point.â Devera nods. âNavarre might be the largest kingdom on the Continent, but we are not the only one. Nor do we travel to the isles anymore. What else?â
âWe lost major parts of our culture,â a girl with a rebellion relic winding around her arm answers from two rows ahead. Tail Section, I think. âNot just our language. Our songs, our festivals, our libraries⦠Everything in Tyrrish had to be changed. The only unique thing we kept were our runes because theyâre in too much of our architecture to justify changing.â
Like the ones on my daggers. The ones on the columns of the temple in Aretia. The ones Iâm currently weaving in my lap.
âYes.â Somehow Devera makes that word sound both sympathetic and blunt at the same time. âIâm not a historian. Iâm a tactician, but I canât imagine the depth of what we lost knowledge-wise.â
âThe books were all translated into the common language,â someone from Third Wing argues. âFestivals still happen. Songs are still sung.â
âAnd what was lost in translation?â the Tyrrish girl ahead of me asks. âDo you know?â
âOf course I donât know.â His lip rises in a sneer. âItâs a dead language to all but a few scribes.â
I drop my gaze to my notebook.
âJust because itâs not in Tyrrish doesnât mean you canât walk into the Archives and read whatever translated Tyrrish book you want.â Itâs his haughty, arrogant tone that pricks my temper.
âNo, actually you canât.â I drop the fabric in my lap. âFor starters, no one can just walk into the Archives and read whatever they want. You have to put in a request that any scribe can deny. Secondly, only a portion of the original scribes spoke Tyrrish, meaning it would have taken hundreds of years to translate text, and even then, there are no historical tomes older than four hundred years in our Archives that I know of. Theyâre all sixth, seventh, or eighth editions. Logic dictates that sheâs right.â I gesture up to the girl a few rows ahead. âThings are lost in translation.â
He looks ready to argue.
âCadet Trebor, if I were you, I would consider the fact that Cadet Sorrengail has spent more time in the Archives than anyone else in this room, and then I would carefully consider an intelligent response.â She arches a brow.
The guy from Third Wing shoots a glare in my direction and sits back in his chair.
âWe lost our folklore,â Rhiannon says.
Every muscle in my body locks.
Devera cocks her head to the side. âGo on.â
âIâm from a border village near Cygnisen,â Rhiannon says. âA lot of our folklore came from the other side of the border, probably as a result of the Migration of The First Year, and as far as I know, none of itâs written. It only survives as an oral history.â She glances my way. âViolet and I were actually talking about this last year. People raised in Calldyr or Luceras or other provinces arenât raised with that same folklore. They donât know the stories, and generation by generation, weâre losing it.â She looks left, then right. âIâm sure all of us have similar stories, depending on where we grew up. Sawyer knows stories Ridoc doesnât. Ridoc knows stories Violet doesnât.â
âImpossible,â Ridoc counters. âViolet knows everything.â
Sawyer laughs and I roll my eyes.
âAll excellent points.â Devera nods, a satisfied smile curving her mouth. âAnd what did the Migration of The First Year give us?â
âA more unified culture,â a girl from Tail Section answers. âNot only within our provinces but throughout the Continent. And it allowed those in whatâs now Poromiel a chance to live under the safety of the wards if they chose to move.â
One year. Thatâs all Navarre gave before we closed our borders.
And if you couldnât afford to move your family, couldnât risk the treacherous journey⦠Nothing about war, or the aftermath, is kind.
âCorrect,â Devera says. âWhich means thereâs every chance that when you fly against a drift, you could encounter a distant relative. The question we must all ask ourselves as we enter service is: are our sacrifices worth it to keep the citizens of Navarre safe?â
âYes.â The answer is muttered all around me, some riders saying it louder than others.
But I keep quiet, because I know itâs not only Navarre paying the priceâitâs everyone outside our wards.
The gym buzzes with anticipation that afternoon as the combat professors call the first names of the day to the mats. These will be the last challenges for months. The first-years will have the Gauntlet to worry about starting next week, then Presentation and Threshing. And the second-years will start disappearing by the squad for a few days at a time so they can teach us how to take torture.
Fun times.
A squad from Tail Section is called to our mat.
âI really hope I get called to the mat today.â Ridoc bounces on his toes. âIâm in the mood to kick some ass.â
âThat makes one of us.â I tighten the strap of my sling over my armor. Looking across the mat, I nod to Imogen, lifting my eyebrows as she talks with Sloane.
She nods back with a smile, telling me wordlessly that Sloane is ready to take on her opponent today. Rhiannon and Sawyer are doing the same with the other first-years, checking in as names are called out around the gym. I glance Aaricâs way, but as usual, heâs completely, totally focused, tuning out everything around him as he stares at the mat.
âHow bad do you think the attack on the Eastern Wing is? It has to be something massive to call out half the leadership all day long,â Ridoc muses.
Big enough to kill Masen.
âSpeculating is only going to fuel rumors,â Dain says, taking the empty place on my left side.
Iâve managed not to have to interact with him for weeks. I step closer to Ridoc and lock every brick of my shields in place.
âAs opposed to not noticing that most of the professors flew out of here like the wards have fallen?â Ridoc asks.
âThe wards havenât fallen.â Dain barely spares him a glance, crossing his arms. âYouâd know if they had.â
âYou think weâd be able to feel it?â Ridoc asks.
âWe would have been called out, too,â I say. âAnd the dragons would have told us.â
âCanât you ask your mom?â Ridoc tilts his head.
âThe woman who knew I was missing for a week, then told me to get back in formation when she realized Iâd survived my first combat mission? Yeah, Iâm sure sheâll be forthcoming with all the information.â I give him a sarcastic thumbs-up.
The first pair is called to the mat, and Iâm simultaneously horrified and grateful I donât know the first-yearâs name.
âYou finally going to talk to me?â Dain asks.
âNo.â I donât give him the courtesy of even looking at him and, to be sure he gets the point, I move to Ridocâs other side, putting him between us.
âCome on, Violet.â He walks behind Ridoc, then squeezes in between Quinn and me. âYou have to be ready at some point. Weâve been friends since you were five.â
âWeâre no longer friends, and Iâll be ready to talk when the sight of you doesnât make me want to bury my knife in your chest all the way to the fucking hilt.â I walk away before I act on the urge to stab the memory-stealing asshole.
âYou cannot keep running away from me!â
I lift my middle finger and round the corner of the mat, taking the spot next to Rhiannon.
âWhat was that about?â she asks, wincing when our first-year takes a punch to the kidneys.
âDain being an asshole, as usual.â Sometimes the best answer is the simplest.
Our first-year kicks out, catching Tail Section directly in the mouth, and blood sprays.
âI donât get it.â She shoots me a confused look, leaning in to murmur so Dain doesnât overhear. âI figured the thing at graduation was him and Riorson dick-measuring, but you donât speak to Aetos anymore. I thought he was your best friend. Sure, you two grew apart last year, but to not even be on speaking terms?â
âWas.â My gaze tracks Dain as he walks around the mat to Professor Emetterio. âHe my best friend.â For fifteen years, there was no one closer. Iâd thought he was going to be my everything.
âLook. Iâll hate him on principle if thatâs what weâre doing. No problem with that. But I know you, and you donât cut people out like that unless they hurt you. So tell me, as your friend: Did he hurt you?â she asks quietly. âOr is this something else arenât talking about?â
My throat clenches. âHe stole something from me.â
âSeriously?â Her gaze pierces mine. âThen report him for a violation of the Codex. He shouldnât be our wingleader.â
If only she knew what her last wingleader had been stealing.
âItâs more complicated than that.â How much can I tell her without it being much?
Our first-year pulls off a quick comeback, getting his opponentâs leg into a bow-and-arrow submission maneuver. Itâs a quick tap-out after that.
We all clap. So far, weâre looking like the squad to beat again this year, especially with the way Aaric is racking up the wins.
Emetterio looks at Dain, then clears his throat. I breathe deeply, waiting for him to call Sloaneâs name. âYouâre sure?â Emetterio asks.
âItâs within my rights as wingleader.â He disarms, unclipping his sheaths and dropping them at the edge of the mat.
What the actual hell?
âNot denying that.â Emetterio rubs a thick hand across his shaved head. âNext match is Dain Aetos against Violet Sorrengail.â
My stomach hits the floor. If my shields slip, I could doom in Aretia and every marked one in the quadrant.
Imogenâs eyes arenât just wideâtheyâre huge as she looks at me, backing away from the mat before quickly disappearing. Where is she going? Itâs not like she can run and get Xaden to interfere like last year. Iâm on my own.
âNo fucking way.â Rhiannon shakes her head. âSheâs wounded.â
Maybe not entirely on my own.
âAnd since when does that matter?â the other squad leader counters.
Breathe. I need to breathe.
âThis is bullshit.â I look Dain in the eyes when I say it, and he simply folds his arms across his chest. Thereâs no getting out of this. Heâs a wingleader. He can challenge whomever he wants whenever he wants, just like Xaden had last year. Ironically, Iâd been in far less danger the first time Xaden had taken me to my back on the mat. Then, Iâd been gambling with just life, but this could get the people I care about killed.
Tairn warns. His agitation rolls through me, prickling the hair on my neck.
Dain steps out on to the mat, completely disarmed, but Iâve seen him spar. Heâs not Xaden, but heâs deadly enough without any weapons, and Iâm down an arm.
âYou shouldnât do this!â Bodhi shouts as he runs at us, skidding to a stop next to me. Imogen isnât far behind. Ah, sheâd run to find the closest person to Xaden possible. Makes sense. âSheâs in a fucking sling, Aetos.â
âLast time I checked, youâre a section leader.â Dain narrows his eyes on Bodhi. âAnd your cousin isnât her wingleader anymore. I am.â
The muscles in Bodhiâs neck bulge. âXadenâs going to fucking kill him,â he whispers.
âYeah, well, he isnât here. Itâs fine,â I lie, reaching for my first dagger. âJust remember who trained me.â Iâm not talking about hand-to-hand, and from the look Bodhi gives me, he knows it, too.
âKeep the daggers if that makes you feel better, Cadet Sorrengail,â Dain says, finding the center of the mat.
My eyebrows shoot up.
âYou know sheâs good enough to kill you from here with those,â Bodhi reminds him.
âShe wonât.â Dain cocks his head at me. âIâm her oldest friend. Remember?â
âAnd this is certainly friendly behavior,â Rhiannon counters.
Taking a fortifying breath, I secure every brick in my shields just like Xaden taught me and step out onto the mat, palming one of my daggers in my free hand. If it comes between killing Dain and saving Xaden, thereâs no choice.
Emetterio signals the beginning of the match, and Dain and I circle each other.
âReach for my face, and Iâll cut you open,â I warn him.
âDeal,â he responds a second before he lunges for me, going for the torso.
I know his moves and easily dodge the first attempt, spinning out of reach. Heâs fast. Being chosen as wingleader wasnât all nepotism. Heâs always been good on the mat.
âYouâre faster this year.â He smiles like heâs proud of me as we circle again.
âXaden taught me a few things last year.â
He winces, then attacks, swinging for my torso again. I flip my dagger so the blade runs perpendicular to my forearm as I duck under his jab, then punch upward, clipping him under the jaw without cutting him.
âFuck yes!â I hear Ridoc cheer, but I donât take my eyes off Dain.
Dain blinks, then rotates his jaw. âDamn.â This time, he comes at me faster. Itâs harder to duck and dodge his swings without my arm to balance, but I hold my own until he catches me unaware and sweeps my feet out from under me with his.
My back slams into the mat and pain erupts in my shoulder, so sharp that stars swim in my vision and I cry out. But damn if my blade isnât at Dainâs throat when he pins me with a forearm at my collarbone a heartbeat later.
Shields. I have to keep my shields up.
âI just want to talk to you,â he whispers, his face inches from mine.
The pain is nothing compared to the ice-cold fear of having his hands this close to me.
âAnd I just want you to leave me the fuck alone.â I hold my knife steady right where he can feel it. âItâs not an idle threat, Dain. You will bleed out on this mat if you even of taking a single one of my memories.â
âThatâs what Riorson meant when he said , isnât it?â he asks, his tone just as soft as his eyesâthose familiar eyes Iâve always been able to count on. How the hell did we end up here? Fifteen years of the closest friendship Iâve ever known, and my knife could end him with a flick of my wrist.
âYou know damn well what he meant,â I reply, keeping my voice down.
Two lines appear between his brows. âI told my father what I saw when I touched youââ
âWhen you my memory,â I correct him.
âBut it was a flash of a memory. Riorson told you heâd gone to Athebyne with his cousin.â He searches my eyes. âSecond-years donât get leave for that kind of flight, so I told my father. I know you were attacked on the way there, but I had no way of knowingââ
âYou said .â It comes out in a hiss. âAnd then you sent me to die, sent Liam and Soleil to their deaths. Did you know what was waiting for us?â
âNo.â He shakes his head. âI said âIâll miss youâ because you chose . I told you I knew things about him, that he had reasons you donât know about to hate you, and you chose him. I knew I was saying goodbye to any chance of us on that field. I had no clue gryphons were waiting to ambush you.â
âIf you expect me to believe that, then you sorely misjudged me, and I know reason Xaden has to hate me, and none of them matter.â
âYou know about the scars on his back?â he challenges, and I contemplate cutting into his throat to get him off me.
âThe hundred and seven for the marked ones heâs responsible for? Yes. Youâre going to have to do better thanââ
âDo you know who carved those wounds into his skin?â
I blink, andâfuck himâhe sees it, the flash of doubt.
âTap out!â Sawyer shouts from the edge of the mat.
âMy hand is a little busy at the moment,â I respond without looking away from Dain.
âVioletââ Dain starts.
âYou may have been my oldest friend, my best friend, but that all died the day you my privacy, stole my memory, and got Liam and Soleil killed. I will forgive you for that.â I press just hard enough for the blade to scrape against the stubbled skin of his upper throat.
His eyes flare with something that looks like devastation. âYour mother did it,â he whispers and slowly rises, first to his knees, removing his forearm from my collarbone, and then to his feet. âShe wins,â he says as he walks off the mat. âI tap out.â
He didnât mean that. Thereâs no way my mother sliced into Xaden a hundred and seven times. Dainâs just trying to get under my skin. I lie there for a handful of breaths, calming my racing pulse. Then I sheathe my blade and roll, gaining my feet awkwardly.
Emetterio calls the next challenge, and I walk off the mat and take my place between Rhiannon and Bodhi like nothing happened.
âViolet?â The question in Bodhiâs eyes makes me shake my head in reply.
âHe didnât touch me.â Every secret in my head is safe.
Bodhi nods, then leaves our mat as Aaric faces off against a guy from Tail Section who looks like he might actually have a shot of ending Aaricâs winning streak.
âWalk with me,â Rhiannon demands, her jaw tense. âNow.â
âAre you pulling rank on me?â
âDo I have to?â She folds her arms across her chest.
âNo. Of course not.â I sigh, then follow her to the edge of the gym.
âWas that about the something he stole?â Rhiannon asks. âBecause whatever it was, it wasnât about defeating you.â
âYes,â I answer, rolling my neck as the aftereffects of the adrenaline roll through me, nausea taking the lead.
She waits for me to add to my answer, and when I donât, she sighs. âYouâve been off all day. Is it because of the attack?â
âYes.â I glance over her shoulder and glimpse Imogen watching us. Does she know Masenâs dead?
âAre you really going to make me pry answers out of you?â Her arms fall to her sides. âI swear to Amari, if you answer with a one more timeâ¦â
I say nothing instead.
âI heard what you said in history, you know.â She drops her shoulders. âYou said something about an assassination.â
Fuck. âYeah, I guess I did.â
She studies me, her gaze flickering between my eyes. âWho else besides Masen is dead that went to Athebyne with you?â
My gaze collides with hers, and my heart starts to pound. âCiaran. He was in Third Squad.â Iâm not telling her anything that isnât easily answered by anyone else.
âAnd you were attacked on assessment day. Imogenâs been targeted twice since Parapet, too. So were Bodhi and Eya.â Her gaze narrows. âDain has one of those classified signets,â she whispers. âWhat did he steal, Violet?â
Gods, sheâs putting it together too quickly. Sheâs also owed as much of the truth as I can give her. âA memory,â I say slowly.
Her eyes flare. âHe can read memories.â
I nod. âNo one is supposed to know.â
âI can keep a secret, Violet.â Hurt flashes across her features, and I feel another thread of our friendship unravel as though Iâd pulled it myself.
A chorus of cheers goes up behind us, but neither of us looks.
âI know.â Itâs barely a whisper. âAnd I trust you implicitly, but not every secret is mine to tell.â Dread digs its claws into my stomach. Sheâs going to figure it outâitâs only a matter of time. And then her life will be in as much jeopardy as mine.
âDain stole one of your memories,â she repeats. âAnd now you think the other riders with you during War Games are being picked off.â
âStop,â I beg her. âDo us both a favor and justâ¦â I shake my head. âStop.â
Her brow knits. âYou saw something you werenât supposed to, didnât you?â
She tilts her head to the side, then looks away.
I stop breathing. I know that look. Sheâs thinking.
âIs that the memory he stole?â
âNo.â I inhale. Thank gods sheâs off the mark with that one. Movement to the right catches my attention, and I glance over to see Aaric walking our way, cradling his left wrist. âShit. I think heâs hurt.â
âWhat killed Deigh?â Rhiannon asks.
Suddenly, thereâs not enough oxygen in the room, on the entire Continent, but I manage to pull air through my lungs as I face her. âYou already know that part of the story.â
âNot from you,â she says quietly, her brown eyes crinkling at the edges as she narrows them. âYou were holding Liam, and then you had to fight. Thatâs what you said. What. Killed. Deigh?â The whispered words cut me to the quick. âWas it another dragon? Is that what happened out there?â
âNo.â I shake my head emphatically, then turn as Aaric reaches us. âFinally lose?â
He scoffs. âOf course not. But I did break my wrist. Iâm supposed to come tell you,â he says to Rhiannon.
âIâll take him to the infirmary,â I tell her.
âVioletââ she starts, her tone indicating that she doesnât think our conversation is over, but it is. It has to be.
âStop.â I turn my back on Aaric and lower my voice. âAnd donât ever ask me that question again. Please donât make me lie to you.â
Her head draws back, and she stares at me in stunned silence.
âLetâs go,â I say to Aaric, then start walking to the exit, shoving what just happened with Rhi into whatâs quickly becoming an overfull box.
He catches up, his long legs covering the distance quickly. The corridor of the academic wingâs first floor is deserted when we enter, and our booted footsteps echo against the windows.
âSo where does your father think you are?â I ask as we turn toward the rotunda, trying to take my mind off everything I just let slip to Rhiannon and everything I didnât.
âHe thinks Iâm on my twentieth-birthday tour,â Aaric answers, rubbing his hand over his square jawline and light-brown scruff, disgust curling his upper lip. âDrinking and fucking my way across the kingdom.â
âSounds like way more fun than what weâre doing here.â I push the door open with my good arm.
âWhat part of this isnât fun?â he asks, walking ahead and opening the next door with his unbroken hand. âBetween the two of us, we have a full set of functioning arms.â
I crack a smile as we enter the dormitory corridor. âEver the charmer, arenât you, Camââ I wince. âAaric. Sorry. Itâs been a hell of a long day.â And all I want is to tell Xaden about it, but he wonât be here for two more days.
We head down the steps, and though Aaric is roughly the same height as Xaden, he shortens his stride so I can keep up easily.
âSheâs catching on, isnât she?â he says when we reach the tunnels.
The hairs on the back of my neck lift as I look up at Aaric. âCatching on to what, exactly?â
âThey havenât hidden it all away as well as they think they have.â His jaw flexes. âItâs easy to figure out if you know what youâre looking for. Personally, it was the daggers my guards started carrying that tipped me off.â He shoots a look at me. âThe ones with the little metal discs.â
My heart pounds so loudly I can hear it in my ears. Daggers. Metal discs.
âThe guards were the hardest to slip, too,â he says with a grimace. âThey wonât tell my father theyâve lost me until they absolutely have to. Iâm just hoping itâs after Threshing. He canât do shit after Threshing. Dragons donât even answer to kings.â
âOh shit.â My chest feels like itâs caving in as I grab hold of his good arm, halting our steps before the tunnel. âYou know, donât you?â
He lifts a brow, the mage lights catching on those royally green eyes. âWhy else would I be here?â