Fourth Wing: Chapter 24
Fourth Wing (The Empyrean Book 1)
I know you donât want to hear this, but sometimes you have to know when to take the death blow, Mira. Itâs why you have to be sure that Violet enters the Scribe Quadrant. Sheâll never be able to take a life.
âPage seventy, the Book of Brennan I move to scoot up the bed so I can sit, but the pain in my arm reminds me that there was a dagger in it a couple of hours ago. Now itâs bandaged. âHow many stitches?â
âEleven on one side and nineteen on the other.â He arches a dark brow and leans forward, bracing his elbows on his knees. âYou turned oranges into a weapon, Violence?â
I wiggle to a sitting position and shrug. âI worked with what I had.â
âSeeing as it kept you aliveâkept us aliveâI canât really argue, and Iâm not going to ask how it is you always know who youâll end up challenging.â Thereâs definite anger in that gaze but a touch of relief, too. âTelling Ridoc allowed Emetterio to get him here in time. Unfortunately, heâs five beds down from you, and heâll live, unlike the second-year a row over. You could have killed him and saved us all a lot of drama.â
âI didnât want to kill him.â I roll my shoulder, testing it. Sore, but not dislocated. My face is tender, too. âI just wanted him to stop killing me.â
âYou should have told me.â The accusation rips from his lips in a snarl.
âAnd you could have done nothing about it besides make me look weak.â I narrow my eyes at him. âAnd you havenât exactly been around to talk about anything in weeks. If I didnât know better, Iâd think that kiss scared you.â Shit. I didnât mean to say that.
âThatâs not up for discussion.â Something flashes in his eyes and is quickly replaced by a cool mask of indifference.
âSeriously?â I should know better, considering heâs avoided it this long.
âIt was a mistake. You and I are going to be stationed together for the rest of our lives, never able to escape the other. Getting involvedâeven on a physical levelâis a colossal blunder. No point talking about it.â
I barely keep from clutching at my chest to see if all my organs are where theyâre supposed to be, since it feels like he just eviscerated me with four sentences. But he had been just as into it as I was. I was there, and there was no mistaking that kind ofâ¦enthusiasm. But maybe it was the churam. âWhat if I want to talk about it?â
âThen feel free, but it doesnât mean I have to be a part of the conversation. Weâre both allowed our boundaries, and this is one of mine.â The finality in his tone makes my stomach curdle. âIâll agree that keeping my distance didnât work out so well, and if todayâs little stunt was about getting my attention, then congratulations. Itâs yours.â
âI donât know what youâre talking about.â I swing my feet to the side of the bed. I need my boots and to get the hell out of here before I make an even bigger fool of myself.
âApparently I canât trust Liam to report deadly situations or Rhiannon to train you on the mat, seeing how easily Barlowe had you pinned, so as of this moment, Iâm taking over.â
âTaking over what?â My eyes narrow.
âEverything when it comes to you.â
â¦
The next day, during what should be our flight hours if not for the howling, subzero winds outside, Xaden has me on the mat. Fortunately, he has his shirt on, so Iâm not distracted by what I know is under it. No, heâs not only wearing fighting leathers and boots, heâs strapped to the nines with what looks to be a dozen different daggers in a dozen different sheaths.
Is it absolutely toxic that Iâm attracted to this look on him? Probably. But one look, and my temperature rises.
âLeave your blades off the mat,â he instructs, and nearly a dozen riders glance our way from other mats.
At least Liam has been given the time to go train himself a couple of mats over against Dainâa first. Most of the squads are in here, making use of the unexpected free time, so thankfully everyone is busy training instead of watching us.
âBut youâre armed.â I glance pointedly to his sheaths.
âYou either trust me or you donât.â He tilts his head to the side slightly, exposing more of the rebellion relic curving up around his neck. The same relic I caressed with my hand while he had me against the foundation wall more than a month ago.
Nope. Not thinking about that.
But my body has no problem remembering.
I blow out my breath in a long sigh and step to the edge of the mat, unsheathing every dagger I own and the ones Iâve won, then laying them on the floor.
âIâm unarmed. Happy now?â I turn to face him, putting my arms out. My long sleeve covers the bandage on my arm, but the throb is insistent. âThough we probably could have waited a couple of days for my arm to heal up before doing this.â The stitches pull, but Iâve had worse.
âNo.â He shakes his head, unsheathing one of his daggers and walking forward. âThe enemy doesnât give a shit if youâre wounded. Theyâll use it to their advantage. If you donât know how to fight in pain, then youâll get us both killed.â
âFine.â I shift my body weight in annoyance. Little does he know, Iâm almost always in pain. Itâs pretty much my comfort zone. âThatâs actually a good point, so Iâll let you have it.â
âThank you for being so gracious.â He smirks, and I ignore the immediate surge of warmth low in my belly. He flips his palm upward, showing me the dagger with an oddly short blade. âThe problem isnât necessarily your fighting style. Youâre fast, and youâve become pretty damned formidable since August. The problem is youâre using daggers that are too easy to pluck out of your hands. You need weaponry designed for your body type.â
At least he didnât say weaknesses.
I study the blade in his hand. Itâs beautiful, with a solid black hilt engraved with Tyrrish knots, old, mythical runes of intricate swirls and ties. The blade itself is clearly honed to lethal perfection. âItâs spectacular.â
âItâs yours.â
My head snaps up, but thereâs no lie in his onyx eyes.
âI had it made for you.â His lips curve slightly.
âWhat?â My mouth opens, and my chest tightens. He took the time to have it made? Shit. That gives me feelings I really donât want to have. Soft, confusing feelings.
âYou heard me. Take it.â
Swallowing the illogical lump in my throat, I take the blade from him. It feels solid in my palm but is infinitely lighter than my other daggers. Thereâs no strain on my wrist, and my fingers comfortably wrap around the hilt, making it much more secure than the knives Iâve left on the floor. âWho made it?â
âI know someone.â
âIn the quadrant?â My eyebrows shoot up.
âYouâd be surprised how resourceful you get after three years here.â A smirk tugs at the corner of his mouth, and I openly stare before remembering where we are.
âItâs incredible.â I shake my head and hand it back to him. âBut you know I canât take it. The only weapons weâre allowed to have are the ones we earn.â Only challenges or weapons qualifications are acceptable. Thereâs a crossbow I have my eye on that Iâm not quite expert at yet.
âExactly.â He smiles for a flash of a second before moving with a speed Iâve never dreamed possible. Heâs even faster than Imogen as he sweeps my feet from under me with one strike, taking me to the mat in a single move.
The ease with which he has me on my back is simultaneously appalling andâ¦ridiculously hot, especially with the weight of his hips settled between my thighs. It takes all my willpower not to reach up and brush the stray lock of hair from his forehead. It was a mistake.
Well, if that memory doesnât cool me right off.
âAnd what point are you making with this little move?â I ask, well aware that heâs done it all without knocking the wind out of me.
âThere are a dozen of these daggers strapped to my body, so start disarming me.â He lifts a sardonic brow. âUnless you donât know how to handle an opponent on top of you, and if so, thatâs a whole other issue.â
âI know how to handle you on top of me,â I challenge quietly.
He lowers his mouth to my ear. âYou wonât like what happens if you push me.â
âOr maybe I will.â I turn just enough that my lips brush the shell of his ear.
He jerks up, and the heat in his gaze makes me all too aware of everywhere our bodies connect. âDisarm me before I test that theory in front of everyone in this gym.â
âInteresting. I didnât take you for an exhibitionist.â
âKeep pushing, and I guess youâll find out.â His gaze drops to my mouth.
âI thought you said kissing me was a mistake.â I donât care if the entire quadrant is watching if that means heâll kiss me again.
âIt was.â He smirks. âIâm just teaching you that blades arenât the only way to disarm an opponent. Tell me, Violence, are you disarmed?â
Arrogant ass.
I scoff and start plucking knives from their sheaths, flinging them across the mat while he watches with impatient amusement. Then I lock my legs around his hips and force a roll to the left, putting Xaden on his back. Willingly, of courseâthereâs no way Iâm kneeling on top of him if he doesnât want it that wayâbut I throw a forearm against his collarbone with the pretense of pinning him anyway and proceed to steal the other daggers he has sheathed along his side.
âAnd lastly,â I say with a smile, leaning forward, our heated bodies nearly flush as I snatch the dagger right out of his hand. âThank you.â
The final blade secure, Xaden throws his palms to the mat and shoves with unnatural strength, arching us straight back until my spine kisses the mat again.
âThatâs.â I suck in a breath, the move shocking me to my toes and lodging him firmly between my thighs. It takes everything I have not to arch up against him and see if he really thinks that kiss was a mistake. âNot fair to use your powers on the mat.â Magical. Sexual. Whatever. Itâs all unfair.
âThatâs the other thing.â He jumps to his feet and offers his hand. I take it, my head rushing as I stand. Not now. Do not get dizzy now. âEmetterio doesnât allow powers in order to level the playing field when it comes to challenges. But out there? The field is anything but level, and you need to learn to use whatever youâve got.â
âI canât do much beside ground, shield, and move a piece of parchment.â I sheathe the new dagger, then collect the others and do the same. They really are lovely, all marked with different runes. Itâs a shame there are so many parts of Tyrrish culture that were lost centuries ago during the unification, including most runes. I donât even know what they all mean.
âWell, looks like weâre going to have to work on that, too.â He sighs and takes up a fighting stance. âNow, earn your nickname and try your best to kill me.â
â¦
February flies by in a blur of exhaustion. Xaden takes every unscheduled moment of my day, and Dainâs gritted his teeth more than once when the wingleader has pulled me out of squad training because he has something infinitely more important for me to do.
Which usually ends with me getting my ass handed to me repeatedly on the mat.
But I have to say, he doesnât baby me like Dain, and he doesnât take it easy on me like Rhiannon does. He pushes me to my physical limit every session but never further, usually leaving me a boneless, sweaty heap on the sparring gym floor, gasping for breath.
Thatâs usually when Imogen reminds me that Iâm needed in the weight room.
I hate them both.
Kind of.
Itâs hard to argue with the results when Iâm learning to take down the strongest fighter in the quadrant. I have yet to beat him, but Iâm all right with that. It means he doesnât let me win.
He also doesnât kiss me again, even when IÂ push.
March arrives with uncountable feet of snow that have to be shoveled before morning formation every day. And the moments the relic burns in my back and I feel like I might crawl out of my own skin if the power building within me doesnât release reminds me that I still donât have a signet. Itâs already almost been three months.
Every morning I wake up wondering if today is the day Iâll spontaneously combust.
âSharla Gunter,â Captain Fitzgibbons reads from the death roll, his gloved hands slipping on the frozen parchment. Itâs warmer this week, but not by much. âAnd Mushin Vedie. We commend their souls to Malek.â
âVedie?â I ask Rhiannon, my eyebrows shooting up as formation ends. I didnât know him well, since he was in Second Wing, but the name is still a shock, considering he was rumored to be one of the best among us.
âYou didnât hear?â She pulls her fur-lined cloak closer around her neck. âHis signet manifested in the middle of Carrâs class yesterday, and he burst into flames.â
âHeâ¦burned himself to death?â
She nods. âTara said Carr thinks he was supposed to be able to wield fire, but it just overwhelmed him in that first rush andâ¦â
âHe went up like a torch,â Ridoc adds. âKind of makes you glad your signetâs still hiding, huh?â
âHiding is one way to put it.â Other than the ability Iâm not supposed to even whisper about, Iâm proving to be the one thing my mother hatesâaverage. And itâs not as though I can go to Tairn or Andarna for help. The signet is all about me, and Iâm apparently not delivering, as the stinging relic on my back constantly reminds me. Thereâs a tiny, secret part of me that hopes my signet hasnât manifested yet because itâs different than the others, not only useful butâ¦meaningful, like Brennanâs was.
âDefinitely makes me want to skip class today,â Rhiannon mutters, blowing on her hands to keep them warm.
âNo skipping class,â Dain admonishes, pinning us with a stare. âWeâre weeks away from the Squad Battle and we need every single one of you at your best to win.â
Imogen snorts. âCome on, Aetos, I think we all know Second Wing has that squad in Tail Section thatâs going to smoke the rest of us. Have you ever seen them sprint up the Gauntlet? Pretty sure theyâve been out there even though itâs still covered in ice.â
âWeâre going to win,â Cianna, our executive officer, proclaims with a decisive nod. âSorrengail here might slow us down on the Gauntletââshe wrinkles her hawkish noseââand probably in the wielding department, too, at the rate sheâs advancingââ
âGee, thanks.â I fold my arms across my chest. Bet I can shield better than all of them combined.
âBut Rhiannonâs skills more than make up for that,â Cianna continues. âAnd we all know Liam and Heaton are both going to decimate on the mat for the challenge competition. That only leaves flight maneuvers and whatever task the wingleaders come up with to judge this year.â
âOh, is that all? Man, I thought it was going to be hard.â The sarcasm rolling off Ridoc is thick enough to earn him a glare from Dain.
âWeâre down to ten of you,â Dain says, glancing over our group. âTwelve of us in total, which puts us at a slight disadvantage against a couple other squads, but I think weâll manage.â
We lost two of the new additions last week when the smaller oneâs signet manifested in Battle Brief and they both froze to death in seconds, nearly taking out Ridoc with the exposure, too. He was treated for frostbite but didnât have any permanent damage. Now Nadine and Liam are the only ones left from the batch we acquired after Threshing.
âBut in order to manage, I need you guys to get to class.â He lifts his brows at me. âEspecially you. A signet would be great, you know. If you can maybe make that happen.â Itâs as if he canât decide how to treat me lately, as the first-year whoâs struggling but still here or the girl he grew up with.
I hate how unsettled everything feels between us, all wrongly sticky, like putting on clothes before you can dry after a bath, but itâs still Dain. At least heâs finally being supportive.
âSheâs going to miss Carrâs class today,â Xaden interrupts, appearing behind Sawyer, who hurries to clear a path.
âNo Iâm not.â I shake my head and ignore the quick jump of my pulse at the sight of him.
âShe needs to go,â Dain argues, then grits his teeth. âI mean, unless the wing has more pressing matters for Cadet Sorrengail, her time is best spent developing her wielding skills.â
âI think we both know sheâs not going to manifest a signet in that room. She would have already if that was the key.â I wouldnât wish the look Xaden levels Dain with on my worst enemy. Itâs not anger or even indignation. No, he looksâ¦annoyed, as if Dainâs complaints are entirely beneath him, which, according to our chain of command, they are. âAnd yes, the wing has more pressing matters for her.â
âSir, Iâm just not comfortable with her going a day without at least practicing her wielding, and as her squad leaderââ
He doesnât know that Xadenâs been giving me extra wielding sessions while we spar.
âFor Dunneâs sake.â Xaden sighs, invoking the goddess of war. He reaches into the pocket of his cloak and takes out a pocket watch, holding it in his outstretched palm. âPick it up, Sorrengail.â
I glance at the two men and wish theyâd just sort their shit out between themselves, but thereâs about a zero percent chance of that happening. For the sake of expediency, I throw my mental feet into the floor of the Archives. White-hot power flows around me, raising goose bumps on my arms and lifting the hair at the back of my neck.
Raising my right hand, I envision that power twining between my fingers, and little shocks blossom along my skin as I give form to the energy, making it a hand of its own as I ask it to stretch the few feet that separate me from Xaden.
Thereâs an abrupt halt, as though my tendrils of raw magic hit a wall, but then it gives, and I push forward, keeping tight control of the blazing hand. Thereâs a crackle in my head, like the dying embers of a fire, as my power brushes Xadenâs hand, but I close my mental fist around the pocket watch and then pull.
Itâs fucking heavy.
âYou got this,â Rhiannon urges.
âLet her concentrate,â Sawyer chides.
The watch plummets for the ground, but I snap my hand back, yanking on my power as though itâs a rope, and the watch flies toward me. I catch it with my left hand before it can smack me in the face.
Rhiannon and Ridoc clap.
Xaden walks forward and plucks the watch from my fingers, dropping it into his cloak. âSee? Sheâs practiced. Now, we have things to do.â He puts his hand on the small of my back and leads me out of the crowd.
âWhere are we going?â I loathe the way my body demands I lean back into his touch, but I miss it the second itâs gone.
âIâm assuming youâre not wearing flight leathers under that cloak.â He opens the door to the dormitory for me, and I walk inside. The motion is so easy that I know itâs not only practiced but second nature, which is at complete odds with, wellâ¦everything Iâve come to know about him.
I pause, looking at him like weâre meeting for the first time.
âWhat?â he asks, closing the door behind us and shutting out the blustering cold.
âYou opened the door for me.â
âOld habits die hard.â He shrugs. âMy father taught me thatââ His voice dies abruptly, and his gaze falls away, every muscle in his body locking as though heâs preparing for an attack.
My heart aches at the look that crosses his face, recognizing it well. Grief.
âDonât you think itâs a little cold for flying?â I ask, changing the subject in an attempt to help. The pain in his eyes is the kind that never dies, the kind that rises like an unpredictable tide and floods the shoreline without mercy.
He blinks, and itâs gone. âIâll wait here.â
I nod and hurry to change into the fur-lined leathers weâre issued for winter flight. He has that unreadable mask on when I return, and I know there wonât be any more doors held on my account today.
We walk out across the emptying courtyard as cadets scurry off to classes. âYou didnât answer me.â
âAbout what?â He keeps his eyes on the gate to the flight field path and I have to damn near scurry to keep up with his strides.
âAbout it being cold for flight.â
âThird-years have flight field this afternoon. Kaori and the other professors are just taking it easy on you guys, since the Squad Battle is coming up and they know you need the practice in wielding.â He pushes open the gate, and I hurry after him.
âBut I donât need the practice?â My voice echoes in the tunnel.
âWinning the Squad Battle is nothing in the scheme of keeping you alive. Youâll be on the front lines before the rest of them come next year.â The mage lights play off the harsh angles of his face, casting sinister shadows as we pass each one.
âIs that whatâs going to happen next year?â I ask as we come out the other side, the snow whiting out my vision momentarily. Itâs piled high on each side of the path, the result of this heavy winter. âIâm going to the front lines?â
âInevitably. Thereâs no telling how long Sgaeyl and Tairn will tolerate being separated. My best guess is that weâll both have to sacrifice to keep them happy.â Heâs clearly not so happy about it himself, but I canât blame him. After three years in the quadrant, Iâd want to get the hell out, too. My stomach sinks as I realize Iâll be in his shoes when I graduate as well, with no real control on how our dragonsâ bond dictates my future posts.
I nod, not knowing what else to say, and we walk to the Gauntlet in companionable silence.
âSecond Wing,â I note, watching the squad from Tail Section slip and slide their way across the Gauntlet. âYou sure you donât want your own squads out here practicing?â
A corner of his mouth lifts, and that inhuman facade of his cracks. âWhen I was a first-year, I thought winning was the pinnacle, too. But once youâre in your third year, and you see the things that we doâ¦â His jaw flexes. âLetâs just say that the games are a lot more lethal.â
We head toward the staircase that leads to the flight field, but thereâs already a group coming down, so I move back to let them descend first.
My heart launches into my throat as they come closer, and I snap my frame to an attention stance, my spine stiffening. Itâs Commandant Panchek and Colonel Aetos.
Reaching the ground first, Dainâs dad offers me a smile. âAt ease. Youâre looking well, Violet. Nice flight lines,â he says, gesturing to the ones on his own cheekbones that come from flight goggles. âYou must be getting a lot of airtime.â
âThank you, sir, I am.â I relax my posture and canât help but return the favor, but my lips are tight. âDain is doing well, too. Heâs my squad leader this year.â
âHeâs told me.â He grins, his brown eyes just as warm as Dainâs. âMira asked about you while we were touring the Southern Wing last month. Donât worry, youâll get your letter privileges in second year, and then you can keep in touch more often. Iâm sure you miss her.â
âEvery day.â I nod, pushing past the swell of emotion the admission brings. Itâs so much easier to pretend thereâs nothing outside the walls than to wallow in how much I miss my sister.
Xaden stiffens at my side as Mom steps out of the stairwell. Oh shit.
âMom,â I blurt, and her head turns, her eyes meeting mine. Itâs been more than five months since Iâve seen her, and even though I want to be as composed as she is, as compartmentalized, I just canât. Iâm not built like she is, like Mira is. Iâm my fatherâs daughter.
Her assessing gaze sweeps over me with all the familiarity of a commanding general and a Basgiath cadet, and thereâs no warmth in her expression as she finishes her perusal. âI hear youâre having trouble wielding.â
I blink and step backward, as though physical distance is going to shelter me from the icy rebuke. âI have the best shields in my year.â For the first time, Iâm actually glad I havenât manifested a signet, havenât given her something to brag about.
âWith a dragon like Tairn, I would certainly hope so.â She cocks an eyebrow. âIf not, all of that incredible, enviable power will have beenâ¦â Her sigh is a puff of steam in the air. âSquandered.â
I try my best to swallow the growing knot in my throat. âYes, General.â
âYou have been the topic of some conversation, though.â Her gaze skims the top of my head, and I know sheâs looking at the silver-tipped braid she thinks marks me as cursed, the hair she told me I was better off cutting.
âOh?â She actually talks about me?
âWeâre all wondering what powersâif anyâyouâre wielding from the golden dragon?â Her lips form a smile Iâm sure she thinks is soft, but I know her too well to fall for it.
âNo.â The single word from Tairn rumbles through my entire body. âDo not speak of it.â
âNothing yet.â I drag my tongue over my chapped lower lip. Winter is hell on the skin during flight. âAndarna told me that feathertails are known for being unable to channel power to their rider.â Only their direct gifts, but Iâm not about to say that. âItâs why they donât bond often.â
âOr ever,â Dainâs dad chimes in. âWe were actually hoping that you might ask your dragon to allow us to study her. For purely academic purposes, of course.â
My stomach sours. The group of them would poke and prod Andarna for gods know how long to appease their academic curiosity, and they might stumble onto the untapped power of young dragons. No thank you. âUnfortunately, I donât see her being comfortable with that. Sheâs pretty private, even with me.â
âPity,â Colonel Aetos says. âWeâve had the scribes on it since Threshing, and the only reference they can find in the Archives about the power of feathertails is hundreds of years old, which is funny because I remember your father doing a bit of research about the second Krovlan uprising, and he mentioned something about feathertails, but we canât seem to find that tome.â He scratches his forehead.
Mom looks at me with expectation, as though to ask me without actually asking.
âI donât believe he finished his research on that particular historical event before he died, Colonel Aetos. I couldnât even tell you where his notes are.â The words are as true as I can make them. I know exactly where his notes areâin the one location he spent the majority of his after-hours time. But thereâs something about Tairnâs warning that makes me simply unable to tell them.
âToo bad.â Mom forces another smile. âGlad to see youâre alive, Cadet Sorrengail.â Her gaze flashes sideways and instantly hardens to steel. âEven if the company youâre forced to keep is more than questionable.â
Shit. Shit. Shit.
I canât step in front of Xaden and make him look weak. I canât even glance his way without telling my mother where my allegiance liesâ¦without telling myself.
âI always felt that we resolved any of those questions years ago,â Xaden says, his voice low, but heâs gone taut as a bowstring next to me.
âHmm.â Mom turns toward the citadel in clear dismissal. âDo see if you can master some kind of signet, Cadet Sorrengail. You have a legacy to live up to.â
âYes, General.â The informal words cost more than Iâm prepared to admit, ripping into the confidence itâs taken me nearly eight months to build with talon-sharp precision.
âGood to see you, Violet.â Dainâs dad offers me a sympathetic smile, and Panchek outright ignores us, running to catch up with Mom.
I donât say a word to Xaden before I climb the stairs, each step making me only angrier until Iâm a ball of rage by the time I reach the top of the cliffside.
âYou didnât tell her about how you got out of the attack in your bedroom,â he says. Itâs a statement, not a question. âAnd Iâm not talking about me showing up.â
I know exactly what heâs talking about.
âI donât ever see her. And you told me not to tell anyone.â
âDidnât realize it was quite like that between you,â Xaden says, his tone surprisingly soft as we start down the box canyon toward the flight field.
âOh, thatâs nothing,â I toss out, intentionally making my tone as flippant as possible. âShe spent almost an entire year ignoring me when Dad died.â A self-deprecating laugh slips past my lips. âWhich was almost as wholesome as the years she spent barely tolerating my existence because I wasnât perfect like Brennan or a warrior like Mira.â I shouldnât be saying these things. These are the thoughts families keep behind their doors so they can wear their polished, perfect reputations like armor when in public.
âShe doesnât know you very well, then,â Xaden remarks, keeping pace with my furious strides.
I scoff. âOr she sees right through me. Problem is, Iâm never quite sure which it is. Iâm too busy trying to live up to whatever impossible standard she sets to ask myself if theyâre even standards I give a shit about.â My narrowed gaze swings to him. âAnd what was that about anyway? Saying that you resolved questions years ago?â
âJust reminding her that I paid the price for my loyalty.â His brow furrows, but he stares ahead of us.
âPaid what price?â The question slips out before I can stop my foolish tongue. I canât help but remember what Dain said, that Xaden has reasons to never forgive my mother.
âBoundaries, Violence.â His head lowers for the span of a heartbeat, and when it rises, heâs wearing that polished give-no-fucks mask heâs so good at donning.
Lucky for us, the strain of the moment is broken as Tairn and Sgaeyl land across the field ahead, accompanied by a shiny smaller dragon who makes me instantly smile.
âWeâre all flying today?â I ask, following as he walks toward the trio.
âWeâre all learning today. You need to learn how to stay on, and I need to learn why the hell itâs so hard for you,â he answers. âAndarna needs to learn how to keep up. Tairn needs to learn how to share his space in a tighter flight formation, and every other dragon but Sgaeyl is too scared to fly closer.â
Tairn chuffs in agreement as we approach.
âAnd what is Sgaeyl learning?â I ask, eyeing the giant blue dragon.
Xaden grins. âSheâs been leading for almost three years now. Sheâs going to have to learn how to follow. Or at least practice.â
Tairnâs chuff sounds suspiciously like a laugh, and she snaps at him, baring her teeth and coming within inches of his neck.
âDragon relationships are absolutely incomprehensible,â I murmur.
âYeah? You should try a human one sometime. Just as vicious, but less fire.â He mounts with an ease I envy. âNow letâs go.â