Iron Flame: Part 2 – Chapter 60
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
Xaden drops the shadows, and we both turn at the same time to survey the damage.
My heart seizes, and I reach for Xadenâs hand reflexively. The wardstone lies in two pieces on the ground, and there isnât a flame in sight.
Holy Dunne, Navarre is Thereâs no seeing over Baideâs body to check on Mira, so I whip my gaze to the right, meeting Rhiannonâs wide eyes where she stands at the front of the archway, protecting Ridoc and my mother.
Jack stumbles backward from the blow of my dagger, a dazed but elated look twisting his face as he wrenches it from his shoulder and drops it to the floor.
âHe only has minutes,â I whisper to Xaden.
Barlow has just his own dragon. Itâs unfathomable. Impossible. And yet Baide is most certainly dead as Jack falls to his knees and laughs up at the sky fifty feet above us.
Mira appears, moving silently around Baideâs corpse, and Xaden gives her a subtle shake of his head when she lifts her sword. She keeps it poised for attack but doesnât continue forward.
âYou know youâre about to join your dragon, donât you?â Xaden asks, his voice low as shadows move in riotous swirls at our feet.
I palm another dagger.
The utter calmness of his tone is unnerving.
âThatâs the thing,â Barlowe says, his blond hair covering his forehead as he falls forward onto a hand. âIâm not. They have us thinking weâre the inferior species, but did you see how easily I controlled her? How easily the energy she bonded us with is replaced?â His eyes slide shut as his fingers splay on the stone.
âJack! Donât do this!â Nolon storms past Rhiannon, his features slackening when he takes in the destruction around him. âYouâ¦youâre better than this! You can choose!â
My chest tightens.
âBecause Xaden answers, his gaze locked on Jack.
Xadenâs brow furrows in concentration.
I think I might be sick.
âThere is no choice!â Jack shouts. âAnd if there was, I made mine the second I saw herââhe shoots a glare my wayââbond the most powerful dragon available at Threshing. Why should determine our potential when weâre capable of reaching for fate all on our own?â
His eyes have been bloodshot for long. When did it happen? Before the fall. It had to have been before I wielded that first time. Back in the gym that dayâ¦
And Iâve thrown the dagger.
Tairn growls, and I glance up to see his silhouette block out the stars far above us.
âMagic requires balance,â Nolon argues. âIt does not give without a price!â
âDoes it?â Jack inhales, and the stones around him turn from a dark, slate gray to a dusky beige. âDo you understand how much power is beneath your feet?â
One block pales, then another, and another.
Shadows shoot forward, knocking Jack backward and driving him across the floor before lifting him from the ground, pinning him in midair with an X across his torso. âWhen did you turn?â Xaden asks.
âWouldnât you like to know?â Jack fights the binding, but Xaden closes his fist and the shadows snap even tighter.
âI know youâre going to tell me.â Xaden walks forward. âBecause I have nothing to lose by killing you. So tell me when. Earn yourself a little good will.â
âBefore his challenge against me,â I answer when Jack refuses to. âHe forced power into my body. I just didnât recognize it for what it is. How? The wardsââ
âDo not block power like the dragons want you to think they do! We can still feed from the ground, still channel enough to survive. Enough to fool them. We might not be at full strength, capable of wielding greater magic under your , but make no mistake: we are already among you, and now weâre free.â Jack gestures at Baide, his glare alternating between Xaden and me. âIâll never know why itâs you he wants. What the fuck makes you so special?â
Tairn urges.
âYou have no idea whatâs coming for you.â Jack grasps at the shadows, his feet kicking against only air, but Xaden wraps another band around his throat, and he stills. âTheyâre faster than you think they are.
coming with a horde of greens. They all are.â
âMight take them a minute to read the map.â Xadenâs tone shifts to taunting. âAnd youâll be long gone before they arrive.â
I shift my weight carefully to avoid Jackâs attention.
Xaden asks.
We have to cut him off from his power. My gaze swings wide, and I see Nolon creeping up on the left. Heâs kept him under control all theseâ
I tell Xaden.
Motion near Mira makes me glance her way as Dain edges past her.
âThey donât need a map. Not when I showed them the way. While you were busy smuggling weapons out, we were busy smuggling them .â Jackâs motions grow weaker, his breaths more labored, just as Liamâs had been. âThis whole place will be ours in a matter of hours.â He splays his palms wide and reaches the wall, then shudders as color leaches from the stone.
My heart jolts. Weâre underground.
Xaden pulls his alloy-hilted dagger and strides forward, but Dain gets there faster.
âNot yet!â Dain grabs hold of Jackâs head and closes his eyes as stone after stone loses its color.
One. Two. Three. I start to count heartbeats as the desiccation expands.
On the fourth beat, Jack wrenches his hands from the wall and grasps Dainâs forearms.
âXaden?â Itâs a request, and we both know it, but he doesnât act.
Dain begins to tremble.
âXaden!â I shout. âJackâs draining him!â Power ripples up my fingertips, ready to strike.
Only when Dain screams in pain does Xaden take the final step and slam the hilt of the dagger against Jackâs temple, knocking him unconscious.
I rush to Dain as he stumbles backward, ripping at his flight jacket, tugging it off and shoving the fabric of his uniform up his arms to reveal a matching set of gray handprints burned into his skin in the same place where Jack grabbed him.
âAre you all right?â Gods, the skin is âI think so.â Dain runs his hands down his arms in turn, then flexes his fingers in appraisal. âHurts like a fucking ice burn.â
âIâm assuming you know what to do with him? Seeing as youâve been doing it since May?â Xaden shoots Nolon a withering look.
Nolon nods, reaching Jack and pouring a vial of serum into his mouth. Xaden withdraws his shadows, allowing Jack to crumble to the floor, then leans over and cuts away Jackâs First Wing patch.
âHow many riders are here?â Dain asks Nolon, who stares at Jack with a mix of disbelief and horror. Suddenly, I understand why he was always so exhausted this year. He wasnât mending a soul in the figurative sense, but the literal. âHow many riders, Nolon?â Dain snaps.
The mender lifts his tired gaze.
âA hundred and nineteen cadets,â my mother answers, holding her hand to her bleeding head. âTen leadership. The rest have all been sent to midland posts and Samara.â She glances at me. âPlus the ones you brought.â
âI saw his memories. Itâs not enough.â Dain shakes his head.
âWell, it has to be,â Mira counters.
âGather everyone. Theyâre faster than dragons,â Dain says to my mother.
âWe have ten hours. Maybe less. Then weâre all dead.â
A half hour later, nearly every seat in Battle Brief is full, and the lines are clearly drawn between those of us who chose to fight for Poromiel and those who chose to stay to defend Navarre. The Aretian cadets hold the right side of the terraced classroom, and for the first time, I donât pull out pen and paper to take notes when my mother and Devera take the stage with Dain.
The nervous energy in the room reminds me of those moments on top of the turret in Athebyne, where we decided to fight in Resson. Except thereâs no choice to make today; weâre here.
This battle began in the wardstone chamber, and weâve already lost. We just happen to still be breathing. Greim relayed to Tairn that Melgren and his forces wonât arrive until the approaching horde does, and word came in about an hour ago that there are other wyvern flying in a second wave.
As if the first wonât be enough to destroy us.
Glancing over my shoulder, toward the top seats, I see Xaden standing next to Bodhi with his arms folded across his chest, listening to whatever Garrick tells him. A painful ache erupts in my heart. How can we only have hours left?
As if he senses the weight of my gaze, he looks at me, then like weâre not facing certain annihilation. Like weâve transported ourselves back to last year and this is just another Battle Brief.
âHow are the hands?â Sawyer asks Ridoc as leadership confers about something onstage.
âNolon mended them right after he took care of General Sorrengail.â Ridoc flexes his fingers, showing off unblemished skin. âDain?â he asks me.
âNothing he can do for him.â I shake my head. âNot sure if itâs because itâs an unmendable wound or because Nolonâs too exhausted from trying to mend Jack over and over.â
âFucking Jack,â Rhi mutters.
âFucking Jack,â I agree.
Devera starts the briefing. Intel reports a thousand wyvern headed this way. The good news? They didnât even bother stopping at Samara, which means casualties are low. The bad news? They donât seem to be stopping , which means we wonât get a delay.
Dain steps forward and clears his throat. âHow many of you have mastered a tracking rune?â
Not a single hand rises among the Aretian cadets, including Rhiâs and mine. The Basgiath cadets look like Dain is speaking Krovlish up there.
âRight.â Dain shoves his hand into his hair, and his face falls before he masks it. âThat complicates things. Dark wielders know exactly where we are because, according to Barloweâs memories, he planted lures all over the college and up the path to the Vale.â
Guess Dainâs done keeping his signet classified.
My lips part. Thatâs the energy Chradh picked up on when we arrived, the same energy that summoned the venin to Resson. Destroying the lures is our best chance of buying time, or at least throwing off further waves.
âI saw where Barlowe put most of the lure boxes but not all of them,â Dain continues as footsteps sound in the doorway.
Every head turns as infantry cadets pour in wearing uncertain, anxious faces. I spot Calvin, the leader of the platoon we were paired with for maneuvers, gawking at the space, his gaze landing and remaining on the map of Navarre. Heâs wearing the same insignia as the rest of them, leading me to believe theyâve only sent their quadrantâs leadership.
âThe Infantry Quadrant will spend the next few hours trying to hunt them down for us while also preparing themselvesâ¦â Dainâs voice drops off, and he swallows.
Devera takes mercy on him, stepping forward. âYouâll be working within your squads tonight. Remember that wyvern are the distraction and the weapon. You take down one of the venin, and you kill the wyvern theyâve created. No one takes on a dark wielder alone. Thatâs how you get killed. Work together, rely on each other, complement each otherâs signets just like itâs the Squad Battle.â
âExcept itâs real battle,â Rhiannon says under her breath.
Where real cadets will die.
âRemember that venin will mimic your fighting style, so change it up if you have no choice but hand-to-hand,â Devera continues, the lines of her mouth tense with worry and perhaps a little dread.
The Basgiath cadets murmur among themselves and shift in their seats.
âIâll bet you all the daggers weâve brought with us that they didnât teach them how to fight venin.â Sawyer shakes his head, drumming his fingertips along the desk.
âFirst-years who havenât manifested, I expect you packed and ready to fly should we fall. Healers are stocking the infirmary and are preparing. Scribes are in the process of evacuating with our most important texts.â Devera glances at my mother.
Of course they are. I can only wonder which texts theyâll consider valuable enough to save, and which theyâll conveniently leave behind to burn.
Mom looks up to my right, where Mira stands with a few of her friends, then drops her gaze to me. âThe assignments given tonight have been decided with the best interest of Basgiath and the Vale in mind. There are incredibly powerful signets among you. Gifted riders.â She looks in the first row, where Emetterio sits. âAnd even combat masters. But I will not lie to youââ
âThatâs a first,â I mumble, and Rhiannon scoffs softly under her breath. ââwe are outnumbered,â Mom continues. âWe are underpowered. However, the odds may be against us, but the gods are with us. Whether you left after Threshing or stayed, we are Navarrian riders, bonded for the purpose of defending dragonkind in the darkest hour, and this is it.â
The darkest hour on the longest night of the year. My stomach churns as I fight off the spiraling weight of hopelessness.
I tell Andarna.
she counters.
Every argument I could make to keep her alive doesnât matter, and we both know it. Humans do not give dragons orders. If sheâs determined to die with Tairn and me, thereâs nothing I can do about it. I press my lips between my teeth and bite down to ward off the sting that comes to my eyes.
My fingernails bite into my palms as Mom assigns the active riders to cadet squads, splitting the experience among the group. Garrick is assigned to First Squad, Flame Section, and Heaton to First Squad, Claw Section, while Emery is assigned to a squad in First Wing. âCaptain Sorrengail.â Mom looks up at Mira. âYouâll be with Second Squad, Flame Section, Fourth Wing.â
Our entire squad looks over at Mira, and my eyes widen at the fear that flares in her eyes.
Anger simmers along my bond with Xaden.
âWith all due respect, General Sorrengail,â Mira replies, rolling her shoulders back, âif weâre to truly use our signets to their best advantage, then I should be paired with you as a last line of defense, since I can now shield without the wards.â
Momâs eyebrows rise in surprise, and my gaze jumps between them like Iâm watching a sporting match.
Mira swallows, then locks eyes with me. âAnd Lieutenant Riorson should be placed into Second Squad, as his signet has previously proven in battle to complement Cadet Sorrengailâs.â She looks at me like weâre sitting across the dining room table from each other and not in the midst of a pre-battle briefing. âAs much as I would love to be her shield, he gives us the highest probability of keeping our most effective weapon alive.â
A tense second passes as I look to our mother.
âSo be it.â Mom nods, then finishes the unit changes.
The heat along the bond recedes, and my posture sags in relief. At least weâll be together.
âWe get both of you?â Ridoc offers a quick smile. âMaybe we have a shot of lasting an hour.â
âMy moneyâs on two,â Sawyer chimes in with a nod.
âBoth of you shut up before I knock your heads together,â Imogen warns from a seat behind us. âAnything less than four hours is unacceptable.â
How long did Resson last? One? And there were ten riders and seven fliers against venin.
âNow that thatâs settled,â Mom says as Kaori steps onto the floor, throwing up an illusion in the form of a top-down map of Basgiath and the surrounding area. âWeâre dividing Basgiath, the Vale, and surrounding areas into a grid of sectors.â
Kaori flicks his fingers, and gridlines appear on the map.
âEach squad will be responsible for a sector of airspace while infantry covers the ground,â Mom continues, nodding to Kaori. Squad insignia appear on different grids, and it takes me a second to locate ours on the side of the Vale, paired with a squad from First Wing. No patches are inside the space, but there are plenty of unbonded dragons no doubt ready to defend their hatching grounds. âMemorize these grids, because youâre not going to have time to pull out a map when youâre up there. If itâs in your airspace, you kill it. If it crosses into another squadâs airspace, you let kill it. Avoid leaving your airspace at all costs, or it will turn into a disorganized melee, and that leaves us with inevitable weak grids. Weâll reassign you as necessary as casualties are reported.â
Not theyâre reported.
The grid behind the main campus, where the ward chamber is located, is horrifyingly bare, as though theyâve already surrendered the space.
âThis is wrong,â I whisper. âWe should be defending the wardstone.â
âThe broken one?â Sawyer questions quietly.
âSay it,â Rhiannon urges.
âYou have a better chance of living through it,â Ridoc mutters, shifting in his seat.
I clear my throat. âItâs a mistake to abandon the wardstone.â
My mother levels a disapproving look on me, and the temperature drops a few degrees. âWhy is it that only my daughters speak out of turn?â
âWe get it from our mother,â Mira snipes in a dry tone, and that lethal look pivots to her.
âItâs a mistake,â I push on. âWe donât know what power remains in the stone, and it was placed in that exact location because itâs over the strongest natural flow of power, according to Warrick.â
âHmm.â Itâs not my mother looking my way this time. Itâs General Sorrengail. âYour opinion is noted.â
Hope surges in my chest. âSo youâll assign a squad?â
âAbsolutely not. Your opinion, as noted as it is, is â She dismisses me without another word, without the reasoning we would have been given had this been a Battle Brief, leaving me half my original size, shrinking in my chair.
A wave of warmth floods the bond, but it doesnât dim the chill from her rejection.
âYou have your orders for the morning,â Mom says. âRiders, find the nearest bed and sleep for as many hours as you can. Most of you who left Basgiath will find your rooms have not been commandeered, and most still contain your bedding. We need you rested to be effective.â She looks over the briefing room like it might be the last time she sees us. âEvery minute we hold out gives us a shot at reinforcements making it back. Every second counts. Make no mistake, we hold out as long as possible.â
I glance up at the clock. Itâs not even eight yet, which means I can keep my mantra for the next few hours. I will not die today.
I canât say the same about tomorrow.
The stars still wink in the night sky as Xaden and I dress in the relative silence of my room. Turns out the remaining cadets had left all but the wingleadersâ quarters untouched, as if weâd see the error of our ways and return.
What few hours of sleep weâd gotten had been sporadic at best, leaving me at less than full strength and a little dizzy, but at least I wasnât plagued with nightmares.
Or maybe my imagination really is that overactive.
Xaden kisses a path down my spine, his lips brushing every inch of skin as he laces me into my armor over the cross-body wrap on my left shoulder that stabilizes the aching joint. My eyes slide shut when he reaches my lower back, and the desire heâd more than sated last night flares anew, flushing my skin. A few simple kisses are all it ever takes, and my body is instantly attuned to his.
âKeep doing that, and youâll be taking this right off,â I warn him, glancing down over my shoulder.
âWas that a threat or a promise?â His eyes darken as he stands and ties me in, tucking the laces so they donât come loose. âBecause I have no problem spending our last quiet minutes this morning tangled up in you.â He slides his hand over the curve of my hip as he moves to face me, trailing his fingers along the waistband of my flight leathers, then dipping them between the buttons and my stomach.
We canât do this, canât hide away and pretend war isnât coming for us. Canât ignore that more than a dozen lures havenât been destroyedâor even foundâwhen just was enough to lead the venin to Resson, and weâve only found half of what Jack left around campus. Canât deny that the last reports from the few riders brave enough to stay at the midland forts along the route from Samara relayed that attack is imminent in the next couple of hours. But do I want to.
âWe canât.â Regret saturates the words, and yet I canât stop myself from winding my arms around his neck. âNo matter how much I would rather lock the door and let the rest of the world burn around us.â
âWe can.â He lifts a hand to the back of my neck and tugs me closer, until our bodies meet from thigh to breast. âSay the word, and weâll fly.â
I stare up into his eyes, marking each fleck of gold just in case I wonât get another chance to. âYou could never live with yourself if we abandoned our friends.â
âMaybe.â His brow knits for less than a second, so quick I almost miss it as he leans into my space. âBut I know I canât live without , so trust me when I say thereâs a very real, very loud part of me screaming to carry you out of here and fly for Aretia.â
I know the feeling all too well, so before I dare to give it voice, I rise up on my toes and kiss him. At the first touch of our mouths, heat ignites between us, and he grabs ahold of my ass, lifting me. I sense that weâre moving, turning as I part my lips for his tongue and throw all logical thought out the door.
My ass hits the desk and I hold tighter, kiss him harder as he slants his mouth over mine again and again, taking everything I offer and giving it right back. This isnât the slow exploration weâd shared last night, lingering on every touch, knowing it might be the last time. Itâs frantic and wild, hot and desperate.
My hand spears into his hair, holding him closer, like I still have Andarnaâs ability to stop time, like I can hold us in this moment if I just keep kissing him.
He groans into my mouth and his fingers work the buttons on my pants at the same moment I reach for his.
âWeâll be quick,â I promise between soul-consuming kisses, flicking open the first button.
âQuick,â he repeats, sliding a hand down my stomach and into my pants, âisnât usually what you beg me for.â His fingers brushâ
Someone knocks.
We both freeze, panting hard against each otherâs mouths.
No. No.
âDonât stop.â If this minute is all we have left, then I want it. Gods, if he would just move his hand a fraction of an inch lowerâ¦
His eyes search mine, and then he takes my mouth like the outcome of this kiss will decide the battle weâre facing.
âI know youâre in there!â Rhiannon barks through the door, and the knock changes to a pound. âStop ignoring me before this becomes the most awkward situation known to Navarre.â
âFive minutes,â I beg as Xadenâs mouth slides down my neck.
âNow,â a deep, familiar voice demands, and Xaden puts a step between us, muttering a curse under his breath.
Thereâs no way. Is there? But just in case there , my hands fall from Xadenâs pants and quickly redo the button on mine before I hop off the desk and rush to the door, sparing a second to check that Xadenâs clothes are in place, too.
âDisengage your body parts or whatever youâre doingââ
I unlock my door with a flick of my hand and yank it open to find not only every second- and third-year flier in our squad but a few of our first-years, including Sloane.
And Brennan.
Without thought for regulation or decorum, I fling myself into his arms, and he catches me, pulling me tight against his chest. âYou came.â
âI left you and Mira here to fight this on your own once before, and Iâll never do it again. I knew Iâd fucked up as soon as you left, but gryphons donât fly as quickly as dragons.â He squeezes harder for a second, then lets me down. âTell me where I can be of use.â
âAre those â Every head turns down the hall as my mother approaches with two of her aides, but her steps falter when her gaze shifts toward my brother. âBrennan?â
âIâm not here for you.â He dismisses her without another word in her direction. âMatthias is going to send the fliers to hunt the lures. Theyâre faster on the ground and better with runes, anyway.â
âWe are,â Cat agrees with a casual shrug, assessing the hallway like sheâs searching for structural weaknesses. Which she probably is. âAnd we donât abandon our drifts. Weâll fight.â
I might not like her, but damn do I respect her. Finding those lures will give us precious time toâ
I grab onto Brennanâs arms, and a spark of hope lights within my chest. âHave you ever encountered something you canât mend?â
âMagic,â he answers. âI canât mend a relic or anything. Probably not a rune, either.â
If he can do it, weâll just have to hold on long enough for Codagh to arrive. âWhat about a wardstone?â
Brennanâs eyebrows shoot up, and I glance past him to Rhiannon. âWe have to guard the chamber, at least let him .â
Rhi nods, then turns to my mother, whoâs still staring at Brennan like heâs a hallucination. âGeneral Sorrengail, Second Squad, Flame Section, Fourth Wing officially requests permission to guard the airspace above the wardstone chamber.â
Mom doesnât take her eyes off Brennan. âGranted.â