Fourth Wing: Chapter 25
Fourth Wing (The Empyrean Book 1)
The Squad Battle is more important than the wingleaders will let on. They like to joke that itâs a game, that itâs just bragging rights for the squad leaders and the winning squad, but itâs not. Theyâre all watching. The commandant, the professors, the commanding officersâtheyâre watching to see who will rise to the top. Theyâre salivating to see who will fall.
âPage seventy-seven, the Book of Brennan âTap out!â Rhiannon screams as a rider out of Second Wing fights to drag himself forward on the mat, his hands splayed wide, his fingernails digging in as Liam holds him in a leg lock, forcing his back into what should be an impossible arch.
My heart pounds as the excitement of todayâs matches reaches a fever pitch.
Itâs the last challenge of this portion of the Squad Battle, and the crowd pushes at our backs, forcing me to continuously struggle not to fall over onto the mat. After two events, weâre in seventh out of twenty-four on the leaderboard, but if Liam wins, weâll jump to third.
My flight time in the gauntlet sky race was the slowest in squad, but thatâs because I kept forcing Tairn to release his magical hold on meâand then weâd lose precious seconds while he had to dip to catch me and toss me back in the saddle. Over and over and over again. I swear, the bruises on my ass from landing in the hard divot hurt less than Tairnâs scoff that Iâd humiliated his entire family line as we crossed the finish line last.
Mikael cries out in pain, the sound sharp, near earsplitting, and pulling my attention back to the action in front of me. Liam holds fast and presses his advantage.
âFuck me, that looks like it hurts,â I mutter over the cheering first-years.
âYeah, heâs not walking for a while,â Ridoc agrees, cringing as the arc of Mikaelâs back looks like a broken spine waiting to happen.
With another cry, Mikael slams his palm into the mat three times, and the crowd roars.
âYes! Go, Liam!â Sawyer screams from behind me, and Liam drops Mikael to the mat, where he sprawls out, exhausted.
âWe won!â Liam rushes for us, and Iâm swept up into a tangle of arms and shouting and joyous squadmates.
Iâm pretty sure I even see Imogen in this little melee.
But I donât see Dain. Where the hell is Dain? He would never miss this.
âYour winner!â Professor Emetterio shouts, his voice ringing through the gym and quieting the zealous energy as Liam steps out of our crushing hug. âLiam Mairi from Second Squad, Flame Section, Fourth Wing!â
Liam puts up both hands in victory and turns in a small circle, and the sound of cheering makes my ears ring in the best way.
Commandant Panchek steps onto the mat, and Liam joins the rest of our squad, sweat pouring off his skin. âI know you were all expecting the last portion of the Squad Battle to happen tomorrow, but the cadre and I have a surprise.â
He has every single riderâs attention now.
âInstead of telling you what the final, unknown task will be and giving you tonight to plan for it, your final task will begin this hour!â He grins, throwing out his hands and turning just like Liam had.
âTonight?â Ridoc whispers.
My stomach hits the ground. âDain isnât here. Neither is Cianna.â
âOh shit,â Imogen whispers, looking over the crowd herself.
âAs you may have noticed, your squad leaders and their executive officers have beenâ¦shall we say, sequestered with your section leaders and wingleaders, and no, before someone asks, your task is not to find them.â He continues to walk in a small circle, addressing each side of the mat. âYou are to break into your squads and accomplish a unique mission this evening without the leadership and instruction of your squad leaders.â
âDoesnât that defeat the purpose of having squad leaders?â someone asks across the mat.
âThe purpose of a squad leader is to form a tightly knit unit that can carry on with a mission after their demise. Consider your leadersâ¦demised.â Panchek shrugs with a gleeful smile. âYouâre on your own, riders. Your mission is simple: find and acquire, by any means necessary, the one thing that would be most advantageous to our enemies regarding the war effort. Leadership will serve as unbiased judges, and the winning squad will be awarded sixty points.â
âThatâs enough to put us into first!â Rhiannon whispers, linking her arm with mine. âWe could win the glory of going to the front!â
âWhat are the boundaries?â someone to the right asks.
âAnything within the walls of Basgiath,â Panchek answers. âAnd donât you dare let me see you trying to haul a dragon back here. Theyâll incinerate you out of sheer annoyance.â
The squad to our left mutters their disappointment.
âYou haveââPanchek pulls out his pocket watchââthree hours, at which time weâll expect you to present your stolen treasures in the Battle Brief room.â
We all stare at him in silence. Out of everything I imagined the third and final task to beâ¦well, this wasnât anywhere near that list.
âWhat are you waiting for?â Panchek shoos his hands at us. âGo!â
Pandemonium ensues.
This is what happens when you remove our leadership. Weâreâ¦a hot freaking mess.
âSecond Squad!â Imogen yells, putting her hands up. âFollow me!â
Sawyer and Heaton make sure weâre all ducklings, following in Imogenâs wake as she leads us across the gym to the weight room.
âYou did great,â I tell Liam as he walks at my side, still struggling to catch his breath.
âIt was epic.â Ridoc hands Liam a waterskin, which Liam promptly drains.
âLetâs go, letâs go,â Imogen says, ushering us through the open door. She does a quick head count and then closes the door, wielding to lock it.
I find a seat on one of the benches, flanked by Rhiannon and Liam.
âFirst thing. Who wants to be in command?â Imogen asks, looking at the ten of us.
Ridoc throws his hand in the air.
Rhiannon turns and forces it back down. âNo.â She shakes her head. âYouâll turn this into some kind of prank.â
âFair point.â He shrugs.
âLiam?â Quinn asks, lifting her eyebrows.
âNo.â He shakes his head, but his gaze darts in my direction, giving his reasoning away.
âNo one is going to try and off me while weâre out tonight,â I argue.
He turns back toward Imogen and shakes his head one more time.
Of course she nods. Theyâre both on Team Xaden.
âYou keep command,â Rhiannon suggests, looking at Imogen. âYouâve gotten us this far.â
A murmur of agreement goes around the room.
âEmery? Heaton?â Imogen asks. âAs third-years, itâs your right.â
âNo thanks.â Heaton leans back against the wall.
âNope. Thereâs a reason neither of us wanted to be in leadership,â Emery adds, sitting next to Nadine. âAny reason you wouldnât be all right following Imogenâs command for a few hours, Nadine?â
Every one of us turns to face the first-year who hasnât been remotely subtle about her hatred of marked ones. Knowing now that sheâs from a northern village on the border of the provinces of Deaconshire and Tyrrendor, I can see her reasoning. I just donât agree with it, hence why Iâm not exactly friendly with her.
She visibly swallows, her nervous gaze skittering over all of us. âIâm fine with it.â
âGood.â Imogen folds her arms across her chest, the wrist with her rebellion relic peeking out from under her tunic. âWe have a little less than three hours. What are your ideas?â
âWhat about a piece of weaponry?â Ridoc suggests. âA cross-bolt would be deadly to any of our dragons in the hands of our enemies.â
âToo big,â Quinn says decisively. âThereâs only one in the museum, and honestly, itâs not even the bolt thatâs deadly, itâs the launching system.â
âNext?â Imogen glances at each of us.
âWe could steal Panchekâs underwââ Ridoc starts before Rhiannon slams her hand over his mouth.
âAnd thatâs why we donât let you lead.â She arches a brow at him.
âCome on, guys! Think! Whatâs the most useful thing to our enemy?â Imogenâs brow puckers over her pale green eyes.
âInformation,â Liam answers. He swings his gaze toward me. âViolet, what about stealing the news missives from the Archives? The ones that come in from the front?â
I shake my head. âItâs after seven. The Archives are locked, and itâs the kind of vault that even wielding isnât going to touch. The whole room is sealed up airtight in case of fire.â
âDamn.â Imogen sighs. âThat was a good one.â
The entire room breaks into conversation, each voice louder than the next as suggestions are hurled into the open.
Information. My stomach twists as an idea takes form. It would be a showstopper, something no one else could compare to. But⦠I shake my head. Itâs too risky.
âWhat are you thinking, Sorrengail?â Imogen asks and the room falls silent. âI can see the little gears turning in your mind.â
âItâs probably nothing.â I glance at the members of our squad. But is it nothing?
âGet up here and work it out in your head,â Imogen orders.
âSeriously, itâs mad. Like, undoable. Weâd get thrown in the brig if weâre caught.â I snap my mouth shut before I say anything more.
But itâs too lateâImogenâs eyes are sparkling with interest.
âGet. Up. Here. And. Work. It. Out,â she orders, making sure I know itâs not a suggestion.
âWe can wield, right?â I stand, brushing my hands down my sides and the hilts of the six daggers sheathed there.
âBy all means necessary,â Heaton repeats, nodding.
âAll right.â I rock back on my heels, letting my mind whirl through a plan. âI know Ridoc can wield ice, Rhiannon can retrieve, Sawyer can manipulate metal, Imogen can mind-wipe recent memoriesââ
âAnd Iâm fast,â she adds.
Something she has in common with Xaden.
âHeaton, what about you?â I ask.
âI can breathe underwater,â they answer.
I blink. âAwesome, but I donât think thatâs going to come in handy if we do this. Emery?â
âI can control wind.â He grins. âA lot of wind.â
All right, that one could be defensively useful, but not quite what Iâm looking for.
My boots squeak on the floor as I turn to face her. âQuinn?â
âI can astral project. Keep my body in one place and then walk around somewhere else.â
My mouth hangs open, matching about half the squad.
âI know, itâs pretty awesome.â She winks, pulling her curls up into a bun.
âYes. That we can use.â My head bobs as I parcel through the easiest way to do this.
âWhat are you thinking, Sorrengail?â Imogen prompts, tucking the short hair on one side of her shaved head behind her ear.
âYouâre going to tell me Iâve lost my mind, but if we pull it off, weâll win for sure.â I might not be enough like my mother to win her approval, but I know where she keeps the most valuable information.
âAnd?â
âWeâre going to break into my motherâs office.â
â¦
âYou are so fucking creepy.â Ridoc squirms two hours later, leaning away from Quinn, well, from Quinnâs astral form. Her body is currently with Heaton, guarded in the weight room.
The rest of us are sneaking through the hallways past the Healer Quadrant. Weâve already run into a squad from Second and another from Third, but none of us had time to question or deter the others.
Weâll rise or fall on our own merit with this timeline, and weâve wasted the last two hours waiting for night to fall so it would even be possible.
âIâve never been farther than this,â Emery says as we pass the last door to the clinic.
âYouâve never even been to the Archives?â Imogen asks.
âI avoid that duty like the plague,â Emery answers. âScribes freak me out. Quiet little know-it-alls, acting like they can make or break someone by writing something down.â
I grin. Thereâs more truth to that statement than most people realize.
âInfantry is still out camping.â Rhiannon points out the windows to the dozens of campfires illuminating the field below.
âMust be nice to get a break,â Nadine remarks, but thereâs no snotty tone Iâve come to expect, just the same exhaustion I think we all feel. âScribes will all go home for the summer. Healers get to spend their weekends on those mind-body-health retreats, and the infantry might have to practice making and breaking camp in the snow through winter, but at least they spend those months around a campfire.â
âWeâll get to go home,â Imogen argues.
âAfter graduation,â Rhiannon retorts. âFor what? A couple of days?â
We come to a fork in the path, where we can follow the tunnel down to the Archives or climb into the fortress of the war college.
âThereâs no turning back from here,â I say to the group, looking up the spiral staircase Iâve climbed so many times that I know each step by heart.
âLead on!â Quinn orders, and we all jump about a foot in the air.
âShhh!â Imogen hisses. âSome of us can get caught, you know.â
âRight. Sorry.â Quinn cringes.
âEveryone, remember the plan,â I whisper. âNo one deviates. No one.â
They all nod, and we begin our silent climb up the dark stairs, then cling to the shadows as we cross the stone courtyard of Basgiath.
âSure could use Xaden right about now.â
âYouâre doing great,â Andarna assures me in the happiest of tones. I swear, nothing bothers her. Sheâs the most fearless kid Iâve ever met, and I grew up with Mira.
âItâs six flights straight up,â I whisper when we reach the next set of stairs, and we continue to climb as fast as we can without making any noise. Anxiety spikes, and my power rises in response, the relic in my back heating to an uncomfortable burn. Itâs always there lately, simmering beneath my skin, reminding me that performing lesser magics isnât going to be enough to vent it if I donât manifest a signet soon.
Eventually, we reach the top of the steps, and Liam leans out just far enough to see down the length of whatâs always felt like the worldâs longest hallway. âThere are mage lights in sconces,â he whispers. âAnd you were right.â He withdraws into the safety of the stairwell. âThereâs only one guard stationed at the door.â
âWas there any light under the door?â I ask quietly. My heart sounds like itâs loud enough for the whole college to hear, even the infantry cadets sleeping hundreds of feet below us.
âNo.â He turns to Quinn. âThe guard looks about six feet tall, but he seems pretty athletic. The other stairwell is down the hallway to the left, which means youâll have to get his attention and then book it.â
Quinn nods. âNo problem.â
âEveryone else know what theyâre doing?â I ask.
There are eight nods.
âThen letâs do this. Quinn, youâre up. Everyone else, circle back down so he canât see us if he looks this way.â I canât believe weâre actually about to do this. If she catches us, there wonât be any mercy. Itâs not in her nature.
We retreat, and Quinn charges up the stairs. Her voice is muffled by the stone walls, but we hear the guardâs pounding footsteps clear as day as he charges past the stairway.
âGet back here! You canât be here!â
âNow!â Imogen orders.
We launch, leaving Rhiannon and Emery in the stairwell as we fly into the hallway. Sawyer rushes toward the opposite staircase, throwing the door shut and twisting the metal joints with his powers as we bolt down the hall.
Iâve never run this fast in my life, and Nadine is already at the door, trying to unweave whatever wards my mother has used.
Liam steps into the spot where the guard stood and lifts his chin in the air, taking the same posture. âAre you all right?â
âYep,â I answer, my chest heaving as Imogen steps in to help Nadine. Nadineâs signet is the ability to unweave wards, which I never thought would come in this handy. Riders are always out there building the wards, keeping the shields up around Navarre. Then again, not many riders try to break into the commanding generalâs office. âAnd Iâll be fine in there,â I assure him, a smile tugging at my lips. âWhich is funny, since I didnât think the same way the last time I was standing here.â
âGot it!â Nadine whispers, nudging the door open.
âIf you hear me whistleââ Liam starts, worry lining his forehead.
âWeâll go out the window or something,â I assure him as Ridoc and Sawyer rush past. âRelax.â Leaving Liam to stand watch, I join the others in Momâs office.
âDonât touch the mage lights or sheâll know,â I warn them. âYou have to make your own.â I flick my wrist, twisting my power into a bright blue flame and letting it drift over me. Itâs one of the things Iâm actually good at.
âHow nice is this?â Ridoc flops down onto the red couch.
âWe donât have time for you to beâ¦you,â Sawyer lectures, heading for the bookcase. âHelp me search for something useful.â
âWeâll take the table.â Imogen and Nadine start sorting through papers on the six-seater conference table.
âWhich leaves me and the desk,â I mutter, walking around the intimidating piece of furniture and praying I donât trigger any wards sheâs set. There are three folded missives in the middle, and I pick up the first, revealing a sharp dagger with an alloy-infused hilt and what looks to be a Tyrrish rune in the handle that she must be using as a letter opener or something. I unfold the letter with as much care as I can.
General Sorrengail, The raids around Athebyne have spread the wing too thin. Being posted beyond the safety of the wards comes with considerable hazards, and though I am loath to request reinforcements, I must. If we do not reinforce the post, we may be forced to abandon it. We are protecting Navarrian citizens with life, limb, and wing, but I cannot adequately relay how dire the situation is here. I know you receive the dailies from our scribe attachment, but I would be remiss in my duties as executive officer of the Southern Wing if I did not write to you personally. Please find us reinforcements.
Sincerely, Major Kallista Neema I breathe past the ache that erupts in my chest at the plea in her letter. Weâve discussed nearly daily attacks in Battle Brief, but nothing on that scale.
Maybe they donât want to scare us.
But if itâs that terrifying out there, we have every right to knowâweâll likely be called into service before we graduate. Maybe even this year.
âThese are allâ¦numbers,â Imogen says, rifling through the conference table papers.
âItâs April,â I say, reaching for the next missive. âSheâs working on next yearâs budget.â
Everyone stops and turns to look at me, all wearing expressions of varying degrees of disbelief.
âWhat?â I shrug. âDid you think this place ran itself?â
âKeep looking,â Imogen orders.
I unfold the next missive.
General Sorrengail, Protests regarding conscription laws are growing within the province of Tyrrendor. Knowing that due to Tyrrendorâs size, it provides the majority of our conscripts to replenish our front lines, we cannot afford to lose the support of the people again. Perhaps an influx of defensive spending on outposts here would not only bolster the provinceâs economy and remind the Tyrrish how needed they are to the defense of our kingdom, but also ease the unrest. Please consider this solution as an alternative to suppressing the unrest with force.
Sincerely, Lieutenant Colonel Alyssa Travonte What the hell? I close the letter and put it back on Momâs desk, then turn to the giant map hanging on the wall directly above me.
Unrest isnât new to Tyrrendor, nor is the sentiment against conscription, but we certainly havenât heard any political rumblings in Battle Brief. Other than to quell discontent, it would make no sense to increase defensive spending there, especially since it holds our fewest number of outposts due to the natural barrier provided by the Cliffs of Dralor, which are unscalable by gryphons. Tyrrendor should already be one of the safest provinces on the Continent. Well, except Aretia. Where that capital should be, there is only a scorch mark, as though the burning of the city has singed the map as well.
I study the map for precious seconds, noting the battlement markers dotted along the countryside. Logically, there are more outposts along our more active border zones and, according to this map, more troops in those locations.
It shows all of Navarre, Krovla to the south, Braevick and Cygnisen to the southeast, and even the barriers of the Barrens, the ruined deserted lands at the southern tip of the Continent. It also shows each of our outposts and supply routes within Navarre.
A slow grin spreads across my face.
âHey, Second Squad. I know what we need to steal.â
It takes a matter of minutes for us to haul the map down and cut it away from its frame, then another to roll it, securing it with leather ties Imogen pulls out of her satchel.
Liam whistles, and my heart nearly leaps out of my chest.
âShit!â Ridoc races to the door and cracks it open as we all prepare to flee. âWhatâs going on out there?â
âHeâs pounding at the hall door! Itâs going to give any second. We have to go now,â Liam whisper-shouts, holding the door open as we all race into the hallway. The map is too big for one person to carry, and Sawyer and Imogen struggle through the doorway as the guard kicks in the door farther down the hall.
My stomach hits the floor, and panic threatens to overwhelm logical thought.
âAnd weâre fucked,â Nadine announces.
âWhat the hell do you think youâre doing?â the guard shouts, charging toward us.
âWeâre dead if he catches us with the map.â Ridoc bounces on his toes like heâs preparing to fight. On any given day, Iâd argue that riders are the superior fightersâwe have to beâbut that Basgiath guard might just give us a run for our money.
âWe canât hurt him,â I protest.
The guard barrels past the first stairwell and Rhiannon steps into the middle of the hallway, her arms outstretched.
âPlease work. Please work. Please work,â Imogen chants.
The map disappears out of her hands and reappears down the hallway in Rhiannonâs.
I barely have time to register that it worked as the guard stumbles, but he keeps running. Any closer and heâll see my face.
âThis was not part of the plan.â Liam moves to my side.
âAdapt! Emery!â Imogen hisses, and the third-year steps to the front of our little raiding party.
âIâm so sorry, man.â He holds out his hands and pushes. A torrent of air rushes down the hallway, ripping tapestries from the walls and knocking into the guard, sending him flying against the stone wall. âRun!â
We sprint down the hall toward where the guard lies limp. âPut him in here,â I hiss, forcing open the next door, the one that belongs to one of my motherâs undersecretaries.
Liam and Ridoc haul the guard in, and I put my fingers to his neck. âGood strong pulse. He just knocked him out. Open his mouth.â I snag the vial hidden in the pocket of my leathers, uncork it, and then let the tonic flow into the guardâs mouth. âHeâll sleep the rest of the night.â
Liamâs wide eyes meet mine. âYouâre kind of terrifying.â
âThank you.â I grin, and we get out of there, running as fast as we can.
Fifteen minutes later, our chests are still heaving as we skid into the Battle Brief room, just under the clock.
Weâre the last to arrive, and the tick of Dainâs jaw from where he sits in the top row with the other leadership tells me weâre going to get an earful about it.
I drag my gaze away, and we find our seats as presentations begin in order of squad, giving us enough time to recover from our sprinting session before we have to take the stage.
A squad in First Wing stole Kaoriâs handwritten manual on the personal habits and flaws of all active dragons. Impressive.
A squad in Second Wing elicits an appreciative murmur when they reveal the uniform of one of the Infantry professors, fully intact with something riders never bearâa name tag. That would grant any enemy access to our outposts, given the rank on the shoulder.
Third Wingâs best offering is a stunned, wide-eyed scribe, stolen straight from his bed, and given the way his mouth isnât moving⦠Yep, someoneâs signet power takes away speech. The poor thing is going to be traumatized when they finally let him go.
When itâs our turn to take the stage, Sawyer and Liam, the two tallest in our squad, hold the top corners of our map so itâs visible to all as it unrolls.
I stand back next to Imogen and search the leadership for a certain pair of onyx eyes. There he is.
Xaden is leaning against the wall near the other wingleaders, watching me with a pulse-quickening mix of curiosity and expectation.
âIt was your idea,â Imogen whispers, nudging me forward. âPresent.â
Markhamâs eyes flare wide as saucers as he forces himself to stand, followed quickly by Devera, whose mouth hangs so wide, itâs almost comical.
I clear my throat and gesture to the map. âWe have brought the ultimate weapon for our enemies. An up-to-date map of all current outposts of Navarrian wings, to include troop strength of infantry battlements.â I point to the forts along the Cygnisen border. âAs well as the locations of all current skirmishes in the last thirty days. Including last night.â
A murmur rips through the quadrant.
âAnd how do we know this map is, in fact, current?â Kaori asks, holding his reclaimed journal under one arm.
Thereâs no stopping the smile that spreads across my face. âBecause we stole it from General Sorrengailâs office.â
Absolute mayhem breaks out, some of the riders rushing the stage as professors battle their way toward us, but I ignore it all as Xaden tilts one corner of that beautiful mouth and tips an imaginary hat to me, bowing his head for a heartbeat before bringing his gaze back to hold mine. Satisfaction fills every ounce of my being as I smile up at him.
It doesnât matter how the vote comes down.
Iâve already won.