Iron Flame: Part 1 – Chapter 5
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
Riders party as hard as we fight.
And we fight pretty damned hard.
The gathering hall is more raucous than Iâve ever seen it by the time the sun begins to set that evening. Cadets gather aroundâor in Second Wingâs case, on top ofâtables overflowing with food and pitchers of sweet wine, frothy ale, and a lavender lemonade that clearly has its fair share of distilled liquor.
Only the dais table is empty. For this one moment, there are no wingleaders, no section leaders, not even a squad leader in sight. Other than the stars on the fronts of our shoulders that denote our years at Basgiath, weâre all equal tonight. Even the newly anointed lieutenants who wander in to say their goodbyes arenât in our chain of command.
Thereâs a pleasant buzz in my head, courtesy of the lemonade and the two silver stars on my shoulder.
âChantara?â Rhiannon asks, leaning forward to look past me and lifting her brows at Ridoc, who is seated on my other side. âOut of every privilege that comes with being a second-year, thatâs what youâre looking forward to? Itâs only a rumor.â
The village that supplies Basgiath has always been open to second-years from the Healer Quadrant, Scribe Quadrant, and Infantry Quadrant, but not ours. Weâve been banned for nearly a decade after a fight led to a local bar burning down.
âIâm just saying I heard they might lift the ban finally, and weâve been stuck with this dating pool for the last ,â Ridoc states, using his cup to motion around the hall, which is mostly behind us. âSo even the possibility of getting leave to spend a few hours in Chantara every week is definitely what Iâm looking forward to the most.â
Nadine grins, her eyes sparkling as she gathers the hair she dyed purple this evening in one hand so it doesnât fall into the pitcher, and leans over the table to clink her glass against Ridocâs cup. âHear, hear. It is getting a littleâ¦â She wrinkles her button nose, glancing past Sawyer at the other squads in our wing. âFamiliar around here. I bet by third year it will feel downright incestuous.â
We all laugh, none of us stating the obvious. Statistically speaking, a third of our class wonât survive to see our third years, but weâre this yearâs Iron Squad, having lost the fewest cadets between Parapet and Gauntlet, so Iâm choosing to think positively tonight and every night of the next five days, during which our only duty will be to prepare for the arrival of the first-years.
Rhiannon pulls one of her braids under her nose and furrows her brow like Panchek as she mock-lectures, âYou do know that trips to Chantara are for worship only, cadet.â
âHey, I never said I wouldnât stop by the temple of Zihnal to pay the God of Luck my respects.â Ridoc puts his hand over his heart.
âAnd not because youâre praying to get a little lucky while the other cadets are in town,â Sawyer comments, wiping the foam from his ale off his freckled upper lip.
âIâm changing my answer,â Ridoc says. âBeing able to fraternize with other quadrants in our downtime is what Iâm looking forward to.â
âWhat is this downtime you speak of?â I joke. We might have a few more empty hours here and there compared to first-years, but thereâs a slew of harder courses headed for us.
âWe have now, and Iâll take whatever time we get.â His grin turns mischievous.
Rhiannon leans forward on her elbows and winks at me. âLike youâll be using every second you can get with a certain Lieutenant Riorson.â
My liquor-flushed cheeks heat even more. âIâm notââ
A resounding sounds around the table.
âPretty much everyone saw you show up to formation in his flight jacket before War Games,â Nadine says. âAnd after this morningâs display? Please.â She rolls her eyes.
Right. The display after he told me that heâd keep secrets from me.
âPersonally, Iâm looking forward to letters,â Rhiannon says, clearly jumping in to save me as Imogen and Quinn arrive, sliding in next to Nadine. âItâs been way too long since Iâve been able to talk to my family.â
We share a small smile, neither of us mentioning that we snuck out of Montserrat to see her family a few months ago.
âNo chore duty!â Sawyer adds. âI will never scrub another breakfast dish again.â
Iâll never push another library cart with Liam.
âIâm going with his answer,â Nadine agrees, sliding the pitchers of alcohol toward Imogen and Quinn.
A couple of months ago, Nadine wouldnât even acknowledge Imogenâs presence because of her rebellion relic. It gives me hope that the new lieutenants who bear the same mark might not face discrimination at their new duty stations, but I saw firsthand at Montserrat how the wings look at marked onesâlike they were the officers who perpetuated the rebellion, not their parents.
Then again, given what I know now, everyone is right not to trust them. Not to trust .
âSecond year is the best,â Quinn says, pouring ale from the pitcher into a pewter mug. âAll the privileges and only some of the responsibility of the third-years.â
âBut fraternizing between quadrants is definitely the best perk,â Imogen adds, forcing a smile and wincing before touching her finger to the split in her lip.
âThatâs what I said!â Ridoc fist pumps the air.
âDid your lip get split while you guysâ¦â Nadine asks Imogen, her voice trailing off as the table goes quiet.
I lower my eyes to my lemonade. The alcohol doesnât numb the ache of guilt that sits heavily on my shoulders. Maybe Xadenâs right. If I canât lie to my friends, maybe I should start keeping my distance so I donât get them killed.
âYeah,â Imogen says, glancing my way, but I donât look up.
âI still canât believe you guys saw action,â Ridoc says, all playfulness dying. âNot War Gamesâwhich were already scary as shit with Aetos stepping in for Riorsonâbut real, actual gryphons.â
I grip my glass tighter. How am I supposed to sit here and act like Iâm the same person when what happened in Resson has changed every single thing about what I believe?
âWhat was it like?â Nadine inquires softly. âIf you guys donât mind us asking?â
âI always knew gryphon talons were sharp, but to take down a dragonâ¦â Sawyerâs voice drifts off.
My knuckles whiten and power simmers beneath my skin as I remember the angry red veins beside that dark wielderâs eyes as she came for me on Tairnâs back, the look in Liamâs when he realized Deigh wasnât going to make it.
Tairn reminds me.
Andarna counters, her voice gruff as though settling into sleep.
âGuys, maybe now isnâtââ Rhiannon starts.
âIt fucking sucked,â Imogen says before throwing back her drink and slamming her glass on the table. âYou want the truth? If it wasnât for Riorson and Sorrengail, weâd all be dead.â
My gaze jerks to hers.
Itâs the closest thing to a compliment sheâs ever given me.
Thereâs no pity in her pale green eyes as she stares back, but thereâs no defensive snark, either. Just respect. Her pink hair falls away from her cheek as she tilts her head at me. âAnd as much as I wish none of it had happened, at least those of us who were there truly know the horror of what weâre up against.â
My throat tightens.
âTo Liam,â Imogen says, lifting her glass and defying the unwritten rule that we donât speak of the dead cadets after their name is read from the roll.
âTo Liam.â I lift mine, and everyone at the table does the same, drinking to him. Itâs not enough, but it has to be.
âCan I offer a word of advice going into your second year?â Quinn says after a quiet moment. âDonât get too close to the first-years, especially not until Threshing tells you how many of them might actually be worth getting to know.â She grimaces. âJust trust me.â
Well, thatâs sobering.
The shimmering shadow of my connection with Xaden strengthens, curling around my mind like a second shield, and I glance over my shoulder to see him across the hall, leaning against the wall next to the door, his hands in the pockets of his flight leathers. Garrick is talking to him, but his eyes are locked on mine.
he asks, pushing through my shields with annoying ease.
A shiver of awareness rushes over my skin. Mixing alcohol and Xaden is definitely not a good idea.
Or is it the best idea?
Even from this distance, I can see his gaze darken.
Wait. Heâs in flight leathers, dressed to leave. My heart slumps, taking a little of my buzz with it.
He nods toward the door.
âIâll be right back,â I say, setting my cup on the table and wobbling a little as I stand. No more lemonade for me.
âI certainly hope not,â Ridoc mutters. âOr youâll destroy all my fantasies when it comes to that one.â
I roll my eyes at him, then make my way across the chaotic room to Xaden.
âViolet.â His gaze rakes over my face, lingering on my cheeks.
I love the way he says my name. Sure, itâs the alcohol overruling my logic, but I want to hear him say it again.
âLieutenant Riorson.â Thereâs a silver line at his collar showing his new rank, but no other markings that could give away his identity in case he falls behind enemy lines. No unit designation. No signet patches. He could be any lieutenant in any wing if not for the relic that marks his neck.
âHey, Sorrengail,â Garrick says, but I canât peel my eyes from Xaden long enough to glance his way. âGood job today.â
âThanks, Garrick,â I respond, moving closer to Xaden. Heâll change his mind and let me all the way in. He has to.
âGods, you two.â Garrick shakes his head. âDo us all a favor and figure your shit out. Iâll meet you at the flight field.â He smacks Xadenâs shoulder and walks off.
âYou lookâ¦â I sigh, because itâs not like Iâve ever been successful lying to him, and the fuzziness in my head isnât helping. âGood in officer flight leathers.â
âTheyâre almost exactly like cadet ones.â A corner of his mouth lifts, but itâs not quite a smile.
âDidnât say you didnât look good in those, too.â
âYouâreâ¦â He tilts his head at me. âDrunk, arenât you?â
âIâm pleasantly fuddled but not entirely sloshed.â That makes exactly no sense, but itâs accurate. âYet. But the night is young, and Iâm not sure if youâve heard, but we have nothing to do for the next five days except prepare for the first-years and party.â
âI wish I could stay to see what you do with all that time.â He looks me over lazily, his gaze heating as though heâs remembering what I look like naked, and my pulse leaps. âWalk out with me?â
I nod, then follow him into commons, where he grabs his rucksack from beside the wall and slings it over his shoulders casually, as if there arenât two swords hanging from the back of it.
A group of cadets hovers around the announcements board like the new leadership list is going to appear at any second and they might be erased from it if someone discovers theyâre not watching.
Yep, thereâs Dain in the center of them.
âYou arenât waiting for tomorrow morning to leave?â I ask Xaden, keeping my voice low as we cross the stone floor of the expansive space.
âThey prefer wingleaders to vacate their rooms first, since the new guys like to move in quickly.â He glances at the crowd around the announcement board. âAnd since Iâm guessing youâre not offering a place in your bedââ
âIâm not nearly drunk enough to make that lapse in judgment,â I assure him as he opens a door to the rotunda. âI told you, I donât sleep with men I donât trust, and if youâre not offering full disclosureâ¦â I shake my head and immediately regret it, nearly losing my balance.
âIâll earn your trust as soon as you realize you donât need full disclosure. You only have to have the guts to start asking the questions you actually want answers to. Donât worry about the bed. Weâll get back there. The anticipation is good for us.â He smilesâreally fucking âand it almost makes me rethink my decision.
âI tell you weâre not together because you wonât give me the one thing I needâhonestyâand you counter with âitâs good for usâ?â I scoff and walk down the stairs and past two of the marble pillars in the rotunda. âThe .â
âConfidence is not arrogance. I donât lose the fights I pick. And weâre both allowed to have boundaries. Youâre not the only one who gets to set the rules in this relationship.â
I bristle at the implication that Iâm the problem here. âAnd youâre picking a fight with me?â The world tips slightly when I look up at him.
âPicking a fight you. Thereâs a difference.â His expression hardens as his gaze jerks left, toward the approach of Colonel Aetos and a rider wearing the rank of major.
âRiorson. Sorrengail.â The colonelâs mouth quirks into a sarcastic smile. âSo to see you both tonight. Leaving for the Southern Wing so soon? The front will be lucky to have such a capable rider.â
My chest tightens. Xaden isnât going to a mid-guard wing like most lieutenants. Heâs being sent to the front?
âIâd say Iâll be back before you can miss me,â Xaden replies, his hands loose at his sides, âbut word has it you pissed off General Sorrengail enough to be reassigned to a coastal outpost.â
The colonelâs face blotches. âI might not be here, but you wonât be as often, either. Only once every fortnight, according to your new orders.â
What? My stomach pitches, and it takes every ounce of control I have not to reach out and steady myself.
The major slides his hand into the breast pocket of his perfectly pressed dress uniform and pulls out two folded missives. His black hair is perfectly combed, his boots perfectly shined, his smile perfectly cruel.
Power rises within me, responding to the threat.
âWhere are my manners?â Colonel Aetos says. âViolet, this is your new vice commandant, Major Varrish. Heâs here to tighten the ship, as they say. We seem to have gotten a little lax with what we allow around here. Naturally the quadrantâs current executive commandant will still see to operations, but Varrishâs new position only answers to Panchek.â
âCadet Sorrengail,â I correct the Colonel. Vice commandant? Fucking . âThe generalâs daughter,â Varrish responds, looking me over in clear appraisal, his attention snagging on every dagger I have within reach. âFascinating. Iâd heard you were too fragile to survive a year in the quadrant.â
âMy presence would suggest otherwise.â What a dick.
Xaden takes both missives, careful not to touch Varrishâs hands, then gives me the one that has my name scrawled across the front. We crack Melgrenâs personal wax seals at the same moment, then unfold the official orders.
Cadet Violet Sorrengail is hereby given two days of leave once every fourteen days to be used only to fly with Tairn directly to and from Sgaeyl âs current duty station or location. Any other absence from classes will be considered a punishable offense.
I grit my teeth to keep from giving the colonel the reaction he so obviously wants and carefully fold the orders, slipping them into the pocket at my hip. My guess is Xadenâs say the same, and rotating our leaves puts us at every seven days. Tairn and Sgaeyl are never apart for more than three days. A week? Theyâll be in a near-constant state of pain. Itâs unfathomable.
I reach out for him.
He roars so loudly it rattles my brain.
âDragons give their own orders,â Xaden says calmly, pocketing his papers.
âGuess weâll see.â Colonel Aetos nods, then turns his gaze to mine. âYou know, I was worried about our earlier conversation until I remembered something.â
âAnd what is that?â Xaden asks, clearly losing patience.
âSecrets make for poor leverage. They die with the people who keep them.â