Fourth Wing: Chapter 28
Fourth Wing (The Empyrean Book 1)
Winning the War Games isnât about strength. Itâs about cunning. To know how to strike, you have to understand where your enemiesâyour friendsâare most vulnerable. No one stays friends forever, Mira. Eventually those closest to us become our enemies in some way, even if itâs through well-intentioned love or apathy, or if we live long enough to become their villains.
âPage eighty, the Book of Brennan The stone wall outside Professor Markhamâs office in the Riders Quadrant digs into my back, irritating my relic as I brace all my weight next to the closed door. Iâm ready to crawl out of my own skin with worry and the insufferable buildup of power thatâs threatening to combust at any moment.
Itâs been two days since we left Montserrat. One day of flight back to Basgiath and one excruciatingly long day of silence.
The sun is barely up. I havenât done library duty since returning, and Iâve somehow managed to get out the door before Liam even knows Iâm gone. Breakfast doesnât matter. I couldnât give a shit if I miss formation. This is the only place I can contemplate being.
Footsteps on the circular staircase to the left make my stomach tense, and my pulse jumps as my gaze flies to the doorway, looking for the first sign of a cream tunic.
Instead, Xaden walks into the hallway, holding two steaming pewter mugs as he heads straight for me. âStill hate me?â
âAbsolutely.â Thatâs not entirely true, but itâs easy to blame all the guilt Iâve been eating for two straight days on him.
âFigured youâd already be waiting.â He holds out one of the mugs as an offering. âItâs coffee. Sgaeyl says you havenât slept.â
âItâs none of Sgaeylâs business if Iâm sleeping,â I snip. âBut thanks.â I take the cup. He looks like heâs had a full eight hours and a vacation since yesterday. âI bet youâre sleeping like a baby.â
âQuit telling Sgaeyl about my sleep habits,â I grumble at Tairn.
âIâm not dignifying that demand with a response.â
âAndarna is my favorite.â
Tairn snorts.
Xaden leans back against the wall across from me and sips his coffee. âI havenât slept well since the night my father left Aretia to declare the secession.â
My lips part. âThat was more than six years ago.â
He stares at his coffee.
âYou wereââ I pause. âI donât even know how old you are now.â Mira was right. I know almost nothing about him. And yetâ¦I feel like I know who he is in the very marrow of his bones. Could my emotions be any more scattered when it comes to him?
âTwenty-three,â he answers. âMy birthday was in March.â
And I didnât even know. âMine is inââ
âJuly,â he answers with a ghost of a smile. âI know. I made it my business to know everything there was to know about you the second I saw you on the parapet.â
âBecause thatâs not creepy.â I let the coffee warm my freezing hands.
âCanât know how to ruin someone without understanding them first,â he says quietly.
I lift my gaze to find that his is already on me. âAnd is that still your plan?â Miraâs words have haunted me for two days.
He flinches. âNo.â
âWhat changed?â Frustration tightens my grip on the mug. âWhen exactly did you decide not to ruin me?â
âMaybe it was when I saw Oren holding a knife to your throat,â he says. âOr maybe it was when I realized the bruises on your neck were fingerprints and wanted to kill them all over again just so I could do it slowly. Maybe it was the first time I recklessly kissed you or when I realized Iâm fucked because I canât stop thinking about doing more than just kissing you.â My breath catches at his admission, but he just sighs, lets his head fall back against the wall. âDoes it even matter when, as long as it changed between us?â
âDonât do that,â I whisper, and he lifts his head again to hold my gaze.
âDonât do what? Tell you I canât get you out of my head? Or speak directly into yours?â
âEither.â
âYou could learn to do it, too.â Why the hell is it so impossible to look away from him? To remember that kiss on that tower had been a game to him, that this all might be a game to him? To quell this impossible ache that swirls in my stomach every time I think about him? âCome on, give it a try.â
As I stare into his gold-flecked eyes, I decide heâs right. I could at least meet him halfway and try. I put one mental foot in my Archives and feel power ripple through my veins. Bright orange, crackling energy streams in from the door behind me, and thereâs a golden light that shines from the window I created just for Andarna. I take a deep breath and turn slowly.
And there, swirling along the edge of the roofline, is a shadow of sparkling night. Xaden.
Footsteps sound on the stairs, and we both look.
âGuess you two had the same idea,â Dain says when he sees us, coming to stand along the wall beside me. âHow long have you been waiting?â
âNot long,â Xaden answers.
âHours,â I say simultaneously.
âDamn, Violet.â Dain runs a hand through his damp hair. âAre you hungry? Do you want to get breakfast?â
âNo, dumbass, she doesnât, obviously.â Xadenâs snide commentary fills my head.
âKnock that the fuck off,â I toss back. âNo thank you.â
âLook who figured it out.â Xadenâs mouth quirks upward for a heartbeat.
Another set of footsteps echoes up the staircase and I hold my breath, my eyes locked on the doorway.
Professor Markham pauses when he sees the three of us outside his office, then continues toward us. âTo what do I owe the pleasure?â
âJust tell me if sheâs dead.â I move into the center of the hall.
Markham looks at me with more than his fair share of disapproval. âYou know I canât give out classified information. If thereâs anything to be discussed, weâll do it in Battle Brief.â
âWe were there. If itâs classified, then we already know about it,â I counter, my hands starting to tremble as I squeeze the pewter harder and harder.
Xaden takes the mug from me.
âItâs hardly appropriate for me toââ
âSheâs my sister,â I plead. âI deserve to know if sheâs alive, and I deserve not to hear about it in a room full of riders.â
His jaw tightens. âThere was considerable damage to the outpost, but we lost no riders at Montserrat.â
Thank gods. My knees give out and Dain catches me, pulling me into his familiar hug as relief floods my system.
âSheâs fine, Vi,â Dain whispers into my hair. âMiraâs fine.â
I nod, fighting against a swell of emotions to keep my control. I will not break down. I will not cry. I will not show weakness. Not here.
Thereâs only one place I can go, one person who wonât chide me for crumbling.
The second I have myself in hand, I step out of Dainâs arms.
Xaden is gone.
I skip breakfast and miss formation to head to the flight field, holding myself together long enough to get to the middle of the meadow, where I drop to my knees.
âSheâs all right,â I cry, my head falling into my hands. âI didnât leave her to die. Sheâs alive.â Thereâs a ruffle of air and then the hard feel of scales against the backs of my hands. I lean forward into Andarnaâs shoulder, sagging against her. âSheâs alive. Sheâs alive. Sheâs alive.â
I repeat it until I believe it.
â¦
âDo you have any siblings?â I ask Xaden the next time weâre on the mat. Maybe itâs Miraâs comment about me not knowing enough about him, or maybe itâs my own conflicting emotions, but he knows way more about me than I do him, and I need to level this playing field.
âNo.â He pauses in surprise. âWhy?â
âJust asking.â I take a fighting stance. âLetâs go.â
The next day, I ask him what his favorite food is in the middle of Battle Brief, using our mental connection. Pretty sure I hear him drop something at the back of the room before he answers.
âChocolate cake. Stop being weird.â
I grin.
A day later, after Tairn puts me through an absolutely draining set of advanced flight maneuvers most third-years couldnât stay seated through, either, weâre perched on a mountain peak with Tairn and Sgaeyl when I ask him how he knows Liam, just to see if heâll tell me the truth.
âWe were fostered together. What is with all the questions lately?â
âI barely know you.â
âYou know me well enough.â He shoots me a look that says heâs over it.
âHardly. Tell me something real.â
âLike what?â He turns in his seat to face me.
âSomething like what those silver scars on your back are from.â I hold my breath, waiting for the answer, waiting for him to say anything that might let me in.
Even from twenty feet away, I can see him tense. âWhy do you want to know?â
My grip tightens on the pommel scales. I instinctively knew the scars were private, but his reaction says thereâs more to them than just a painful memory. âWhy donât you want to tell me?â
Sgaeyl startles, then launches into the air, leaving Tairn and me behind.
âAre you pushing for a reason?â Tairn asks.
âCan you give me one not to?â
âHe cares for you. Thatâs already hard enough for him.â
I scoff. âHe cares about keeping me alive. Thereâs a difference.â
âNot for him there isnât.â
â¦
The afternoon skies above Basgiath are crystal clear in the middle of May for the first battle of the War Games that signify the approach of graduation. As much as I want to feel excitement that Iâm so close to actually surviving my first year in the Riders Quadrant, my stomach is tight with anxiety.
Battle Briefs are getting more redacted. Professor Carr is getting more anxious that I havenât manifested a signet like almost the entire first-year cadets. Dain is acting weird as fuckâfriendly one minute and indifferent the next. Xaden is getting more secretiveâif that were even possibleâcanceling some of our training for unexplained reasons. Even Tairn feels like thereâs something heâs not telling me.
âWhat do you think our assignment is going to be?â Liam asks from my right as we stand in formation in the center of the courtyard with the rest of Fourth Wing. âDeigh thinks weâre on offense. He wonât stop going on about getting to kick Gleannâs assââ He pauses, as if listening to his dragon. âGuess dragons hold grudges,â he finally whispers.
Leadership is gathered ahead of us, getting their assignments from Xaden.
âWeâre definitely on offense,â Rhiannon answers from my left. âOtherwise, weâd already be in the field. I havenât seen a single rider from First Wing since lunch.â
My stomach bottoms out. First Wing. Go figure theyâd be our first opponent. Anything goes out there during War Games, and Jack Barlowe hasnât forgotten that I put him in the infirmary for four days. He gave me a wider berth for weeks after Xaden executed Oren and the other kids who had attacked meâand of course everyone stopped fucking with me after Amber Mavis. But still, Iâd catch a look from him as we passed in the halls or in the cafeteria, pure hatred burning in the glacial blue depths of his eyes.
âI think sheâs right,â I tell Liam, struggling not to fidget as the sun bakes through my flight leathers. Itâs been a while since Iâve envied the scribes and their cream uniforms, but this weather has me feeling like we got the shorter end of the uniform stick. It also doesnât help that I must have slept wrong, because my knee is killing me, and the stabilizing wrap feels like itâs a million degrees. âWhy do you think riders wear black anyway?â
âBecause itâs badass,â Ridoc answers from behind me.
âSo itâs harder to see when we bleed,â Imogen chimes in.
âForget I asked,â I mumble, watching for any signs that the leadership meeting will be over soon. Bleeding is the last thing I want to do today. âAre we on offense or defense?â I ask Xaden.
âLittle busy right now.â
âOh no, am I distracting you?â A smile curves my mouth.
Shit, am I flirting? Maybe.
Do I care? Oddly enoughâ¦no.
âYes.â His tone is so gruff that I have to press my lips in a tight line to keep from laughing.
âCome on. Youâre taking forever over there. Give a girl a hint.â
âBoth,â he growls, but he doesnât shut me out with his shieldsâwhich I know he can doâso I have a little mercy on him and the meeting heâs supposed to be leading and leave him be.
Offense and defense? This afternoon should be interesting.
âYou hear from Mira?â Rhiannon whispers, shooting me a quick glance.
I shake my head.
âThatâs justâ¦inhumane.â
âDid you honestly think theyâd break the no-correspondence rule? Even if they tried, Mom would have shut that down with a quickness.â
Rhiannon sighs, and I donât blame her. Thereâs not much more to say on the subject.
The leadership meeting breaks up, and Dain heads over with Cianna. Heâs practically beaming, his hands clenching and unclenching with nervous energy.
âWhich is it?â Heaton asks. âOffense or defense?â
âBoth,â he says as the other squad leaders report back to their riders.
I fake surprise and glance past him, but Xaden and the section leaders are nowhere to be seen.
âFirst Wing has taken a defensive position in one of the practice forts in the mountains, and theyâre guarding a crystal egg,â Dain tells us, and the older riders in our squad murmur with excitement.
Makes sense. Itâs probably a symbolic nod to the different breeds of dragons bringing their eggs to Basgiath when Navarre unified.
âWhat are we missing?â Ridoc asks. âBecause you guys seemed thrilled about an egg.â
âFrom past years, we know that eggs are worth more points,â Cianna says, grinning enthusiastically. âFlags have statistically been the lowest, and captured professors rank somewhere in the middle.â
âBut they like to switch it up,â Dain adds. âThe same way we could be going for a real objective on the line only to discover itâs not as valuable as we thought.â
âSo how is this both offense and defense?â Rhiannon asks. âIf they have the egg, then clearly we should go get the egg.â
âBecause weâve also been given a flag to defend and no outpost to do it in.â He grins. âAnd our squad has been assigned to carry it.â
âYou gave Dain the mission to defend Fourth Wingâs flag?â
âIâm hoping he learned something from your sisterâs lesson at Montserrat,â Xaden replies, but his voice is quieter, which Iâm starting to learn means heâs farther away. I canât help but wonder if weâll have the ability to communicate this way in a few months when more distance separates us.
My chest aches at the thought that he wonât be here. Heâll be risking his life on the front lines.
âAnd who is going to carry this flag?â Imogen asks.
Dain somehow manages to smile even wider. âThatâs going to be the fun part.â
Over the next twenty minutes, weâre drilled in strategy during the walk over to the flight field, and from the sound of it, Dain was paying attention to Mira.
The plan is simple: play to our individual strengths and pass the flag often, never giving First Wing a chance to spot who is carrying it.
When we get to the flight field, there are dozens upon dozens of dragons filling the muddy field, all positioned as though they had formation in their squads, too. Itâs easy to spot Tairn, seeing as his head rises above all others.
Thereâs a palpable air of anticipation as we walk by the other squads, all mounting as the squad and section leaders give out last-minute orders.
âWeâre going to win,â Rhiannon says with confidence, linking her arm with mine as we approach our section of the field.
âWhat makes you so sure?â
âWe have you, Tairn, Riorson, and Sgaeyl. And obviouslyâme.â She grins. âThereâs no way weâre losing this.â
âYou are certainlyââ My words die as Tairn comes into full view.
He stands tall and proud at the front of our section, not bothering to give deference to Cath as Dainâs dragon, but itâs not his position that steals my breath. Itâs the saddle strapped across his back that has me gawking.
âI hear itâs all the fashion,â Tairn brags.
âThatâsâ¦â I donât even have words. The black metal bands look to be intricately linked as they loop around each foreleg and come together at the front of his chest, forming a triangular plate before rising above his shoulders to a saddle with strapped, secure stirrups. âThatâs a saddle.â
âThatâs cool, thatâs what that is.â Rhiannon thumps my back. âAnd it looks way more comfortable than Feirgeâs bony spine, Iâll tell you that. See you up there.â She walks past Tairn toward her own mount.
âI canât use that.â I shake my head. âItâs not allowed.â
âI decide whatâs allowed and whatâs not,â Tairn growls, lowering his head to my level and blasting me with a chuff of steam. âThere is no rule that says a dragon cannot modify their seat to serve their rider. You have worked just as hardâif not harderâthan every rider in this quadrant. Just because your body is built differently than the others doesnât mean you donât deserve to keep your seat. It takes more than a few strips of leather and a pommel to define a rider.â
âHeâs right, you know,â Xaden agrees as he approaches, and I briefly wonder where heâd gone that heâs back so quickly.
âNo one asked you.â My pulse jolts and my skin flushes at the sight of him. Our uniforms make every rider look good, but Xaden takes even that up a notch with the way it cuts across the muscled lines of his body.
âIf you donât use it, Iâll take personal offense.â He folds his arms across his chest and studies the rigging. âConsidering I had it made for you and just about got myself burned alive in the process of trying to get it on him.â He lifts a brow at Tairn. âEven though he helped design it, I might add.â
âThe first models were unacceptable, and you had the gall to pinch my chest scales when clumsily assembling it this morning.â Tairnâs golden eyes narrow on Xaden.
âHow was I to know the leather from the prototype would burn so easily? And itâs not like there are a lot of manuals on fitting a saddle to a dragon,â Xaden drawls.
âIt doesnât matter because I canât use it.â I turn to face Xaden. âItâs beautiful, a marvel of engineeringâ¦â
âAnd?â His jaw locks.
âAnd everyone here will know I canât keep my seat without it.â Heat stings my cheeks.
âHate to break it to you, Violence, but everyone already knows that.â He gestures to the saddle. âThat right there is the most practical way for you to ride. It has straps across your thighs to buckle yourself in once youâre up, and theoretically, you should be able to change positions on long flights without unbuckling, since we built in a lap belt, too.â
âTheoretically?â
âHe wasnât amenable to me giving it a test flight.â
âYou can ride me when the flesh rots off my bones, wingleader.â
Well, thatâs descriptive.
âLook, thereâs no rule against it. I checked. And if anything, youâll be doing Tairn a favor by freeing all his power and taking the weight of worry off his mind. Mine too, if that helps matters.â
My fingernails bite into my palms as I search for another reason, another excuse, but there isnât one. I might not want to appear different than every other rider on this field, but I already am.
âFuck, that stubborn, feisty look always makes me want to kiss you.â Xadenâs expression remains bland, bored even, but his eyes heat as his gaze drops to my mouth.
âAnd you say this now, where people will see if you actually do.â My breath catches.
âWhen did I ever give you the impression that I give a fuck what people think about me?â A corner of his mouth rises, and now itâs all I can concentrate on, damn him. âI only care what they think about you.â
Because heâs a wingleader.
Nothing is worse than cadets gossiping that youâve slept your way to safety. Thatâs what Mira warned at Parapet.
âMount up, Sorrengail. We have a battle to win.â
I rip my gaze from his and study the exquisite, intricate structure of the saddle. âItâs beautiful. Thank you, Xaden.â
âYouâre welcome.â He turns but leans into my space, and a shiver dances down my spine when his lips brush my ear. âConsider my favor fulfilled.â
âIs that a saddle?â
I jump back from Xaden, but he doesnât budge an inch as Dain interrupts, holding a giant yellow flag on a four-foot pole, his eyes wide as he stares at Tairn.
âNo, itâs a collar,â Tairn snips, snapping his teeth together.
Dain backs up a few steps.
âYes,â Xaden answers. âHave a problem with it?â
âNo.â Dain looks at Xaden like heâs being unreasonable. âWhy would I have an issue with it? Iâm fine with whatever keeps Violet safe, if you havenât noticed.â
âGood.â Xaden nods once and turns toward me. âBet it would be even more awkward if I kissed you now, huh?â
Yes, please.
âThe next time we kiss had better not be just to piss off Dain.â The next time had better only be because we want it.
âNext time, huh?â His gaze lowers to my mouth again.
And of course, now thatâs all Iâm thinking about, the feel of his lips on mine, the way his hands always cradle the nape of my neck, the slide of his tongue. I stop myself from leaning in. Barely. âGo lead your wingâor do whatever it is you do.â
âIâll be stealing an egg.â His smile flashes before he turns back to Dain. âKeep our flag out of First Wingâs hands.â
Dain nods and Xaden leaves, heading across the field to where Sgaeyl waits.
âItâs a great saddle,â Dain says.
âIt is,â I agree, and Dain offers me a smile before walking toward Cath.
Moving toward Tairnâs foreleg, I have to laugh as he dips his shoulder for me. âWhat? No ladder?â
âWe thought about it and decided it would make you too vulnerable.â
âOf course you thought aboutââ I pause before climbing when a flash of gold gallops toward me. âAndarna?â
âI want to battle, too.â She skids to a halt directly in front of me.
My mouth opens and shuts. Andarna has been flying with us, and for short times, she can keep up with Tairn, but the way those scales shine in the sun is a beacon forâ¦everyone.
But if I can have a saddle, thenâ
âGot it.â My eyes sweep the flight field, which is at the height of its muddiest since the runoff season from the snowy peaks above. âGo roll.â I point to the mud. âUnless thatâs going to mess with your wings? Itâs the scales on your belly Iâm most worried about being easily spotted.â
âNo problem!â She races off, and I mount Tairn, finding the actual saddle covering the seat at the base of his neck and the pommel scales.
âI thought you said leather was bad?â The saddle itself is sumptuous black leather, complete with two raised pommels for my hands, and when I settle in, it fits like a dream. I bend and adjust the stirrups with the buckle system on the straps.
âThe leather is a hazard on my chest if we take a fire attack, since your saddle would slide right off. But if you take a direct blast up there, sitting on a piece of metal isnât going to save you.â
I donât bother pointing out that the only fire weâd be taking is from other dragons, which is a problem that doesnât exist, since gryphons are all beak and claw. Instead, I find the straps for my thighs and buckle in.
âThis is ingenious,â I say to Xaden.
âLet me know if it needs modifications after we win today.â
Arrogant ass.
Weâre airborne moments later, Andarna keeping up and staying tucked close to Tairn just like weâve practiced.
Our mission is to keep the flag out of enemy hands, so we skirt the perimeter of the hundred-mile battlefield that encompasses most of the central range while the other squads handle reconnaissance and retrieval.
About an hour into the afternoon, Iâm wondering if this assignment is actually meant as punishment for Dain and not an honor. The twelve of us are split into two tight formations of six, seven when taking Andarna into account. Dain has the flag in his group just ahead of us, and when we reach yet another peak in the range, he splits to the right.
Tairn banks to the left, and my stomach pitches as we sweep down the side of the mountain. The wide straps dig into my thighs, holding me firmly in place, and my heart thunders as pure exhilaration hits as hard as the rush of wind against my face and goggles as we dive, and dive, and dive.
And for the first time, thereâs no fear that Iâll tumble off his back. Slowly, I unclench my hands from the pommels and a heartbeat later, my hands are above my head as we plummet toward the valley below.
Iâve lived twenty years and never felt as alive as I do in this moment. Without even grounding in my Archives, power surges in my veins, crackling with a life all its own, jolting every single one of my senses to a degree that nears pain.
Tairn flares his wings, catching air and pulling out of the dive.
âYouâre going to have to work on those shoulder muscles, Silver One. Weâll practice this week.â
Leaning as far as I can out of the saddle, I see Andarna clutched in Tairnâs claw as we level out in a glide along the valley floor.
âThanks! Iâve got it now,â Andarna says, and Tairn lets her free.
Power rattles my bones, as if itâs looking for a way out, and I force myself upright. Itâs different than usualâ¦like instead of standing ready to be molded by my hands, it wants to mold me.
A moment of fear skitters along my spine. What if the backlash of power from not manifesting a signet has chosen today to finally release? I shake my head. I do not have time to worry about what might happenânot in the middle of the War Games. My power is just feeling free because Iâm finally not so focused on falling out of my seat. Thatâs all it is.
Sitting tall in the saddle, I sweep my unsteady gaze along the landscape as Tairn begins to climb again, and my heart stutters. Up high on the western ridgeline is a gray tower that almost blends in to the cliffside. I would have missed it if not for theâ
âIs that what I think it is?â Fear only feeds the uncontrollable energy prickling my skin.
Tairnâs head is already turned in that direction. âDragons.â
I glance over my shoulder toward Liam and Rhiannon and see that Tairn must have relayed the message, because we break formation, scattering as three dragons launch from the cliff above us, diving in different directions.
Weâve given them multiple targets, but now weâll face them one-on-one.
A hail of ice pellets strikes my skin, bouncing off Tairnâs scales, but heâs forced to tuck his wings in tight to avoid damage.
My stomach launches into my throat as we free-fall, the valley floor rising up at us at an alarming rate. Heat and energy threaten to devour every inch of my body, and even my eyes feel like theyâre on fire. Oh fuck, my signet is going to backlash against me during the games.
âGround now!â Tairn roars.
I slam my eyes shut, throwing both mental feet onto the marble floor of the Archives and throwing up the walls around me, only leaving entrances for Tairnâs torrent of power, Andarna, and access to Xaden, and I immediately feel more in control.
When I open my eyes, weâre ascending, Tairnâs wings beating with so much force that I slide back in the saddle with every push.
Heâs left the ice-wielding First Wing cadet in a dive behind us, and I cringe as the dragon barely controls the descent, banking in the opposite direction weâre headed.
âThatâs where theyâre guarding the egg.â It has to be, considering another three dragons have taken the place of the others at the edge of the cliff, ready to launch.
âAgreed. Hold tight.â Tairn barely has a second to shout before a dragon flies out of the valley to the right and blasts a stream of fire at us.
âTairn!â I scream, watching in horror as the flames barrel toward us.
Tairn banks, taking the blast straight to his belly, shielding me from all but the sizzling heat that blazes by.
What the actual fuck?
âAndarna?â If something happens to her because First Wing is out for bloodâ¦
âFireproof, remember?â
I let out a shaky breath. One worry down, but the other dragon is on our heels, opening its mouth and curling its tongue.
Tairn jerks and his tail swings, catching the offending dragon in the side, just below its wing. The other dragon roars, falling sideways, losing altitude at an alarming rate.
But I donât focus on the descent. Instead, I use the time to scan the mountainside for the outpost I spied earlier. My heartbeat quickens as I spot it peeking out from a ridge, only one remaining dragon guarding it.
âXaden! The egg is here!â I relay.
âAlready on my way. Weâre twenty miles out.â The edge of panic lacing his tone puts a knot of fear in my throat, which only grows when I see Deigh and Liam locked in battle above us with a familiar Orange ScorpiontailâBaide.
Jack.
âWe have to help Liam.â
âOn it.â Tairn accelerates and Andarna falls away. Once I see her tuck into the mountainside where sheâll be safe, I hunker down on Tairnâs neck, giving him less wind resistance to fight as we climb faster than ever before. Wind yanks at the halo braid of my hair, the loosened strands whipping at my face as I keep my eyes locked on Deigh and Liam.
Baide snaps her tail at Deigh, the venomous bulb perilously close to Deighâs throat.
âHis scales are thicker than you think. Itâs Liam whoâs in danger,â Tairn warns, climbing higher.
Weâre almost there when Jack unsheathes his sword and jumps from Baideâs back to Deighâs, catching Liam by surprise as the dragons grapple close to the tower weâre approaching at breakneck speed.
Thereâs barely time for Liam to gain his feet before Jack thrusts the sword through his side.
âLiam!â The scream tears from my throat as Jack kicks his boot into Liamâs stomach, forcing Liamâs body off the bladeâ¦and Deigh.
No. No. No.
Liam falls, his arms flailing as he plummets ahead of us.
âCatch him!â I demand, afraid we wonât make it.
Deigh and Baide collide with the tower, and I glimpse Jack rolling to safety on the highest turret, his sadistic grin wide enough to see from here as Tairn changes course with a dramatic right roll.
Only the leather straps across my thighs keep me seated as we chase Liamâs tumbling body, Tairnâs wings tucked in tight, but the outcroppings are too close, and weâre too high.
No. My throat closes. I refuse to lose him. Not when heâs dedicated so many months of his life to keeping me alive. Failing isnât an option. Itâs justâ¦not.
âAndarna?â I cry, already throwing open the window in my mind to where her glittering gift lies in wait.
âDo it,â she answers. âFocus on everything except you and Tairn!â
Sheâs right. Thereâs no point in me catching up to Liam if Tairn is frozen.
âDo it!â
I reach for the golden power and my back arches as it barrels down my spine, flooding through my fingers and toes, enveloping every cell in my body before blasting outward in a shock wave that passes over Tairn.
Suddenly, weâre the only ones moving, plunging through a windless sky toward Liamâs frozen body, mere feet from the rugged outcropping of rocks below.
Heartbeats, thatâs all we have. My entire body trembles with the effort to hold it, the power flowing from Andarna ebbing as Tairn extends his wings and claw, snatching Liamâs body from midair and taking out the rocks with the force of his tail as we barely escape death ourselves.
âGot him.â
Time snaps back, wind blasting me in the face as we climb, turning tightly to avoid colliding with the ridgeline.
âAndarna?â
âSafe.â Her voice is barely a whisper in my head.
Wrath and fury boil my blood as my eyes lock onto the figure on top of that tower. This is the last time this asshole will come after my friends or me.
Feirge appears from below, Rhiannonâs arms outstretched as they rise beneath us. Tairn slows just enough to transfer Liam to her. Heâs aliveâhe has to be. Itâs the only outcome Iâll accept.
In my peripherals, I see Cath and other dragons arrive from the north just as another squad launches from the cliff above.
Baide is airborne behind us, racing toward her asshole of a rider, who is still gloating on the top of that fucking tower.
âClimb!â I order, unsheathing a blade at my ribs and leaving one hand free to unsnap the buckles when itâs time.
âYou will not unseat yourself!â Tairn bellows at me as we surge forward, leaving the smaller orange dragon behind us. He swivels his head left, blasting a stream of fire toward the line of First Wing dragons to warn them off and succeeding as we barrel past.
A growing power sizzles in my chest as I lock my gaze on Jack. I can see the sick pleasure on his face as we fly closer, the blood that drips from his sword. Liamâs blood.
An enormous dragon appears on the horizon. I donât need to look or even open my feelings to know itâs Xaden, but I canât spare a moment for him. Tairn is climbing faster than weâve ever climbed, and power is racing along my skin, scorching my blood.
If this is it, if my power is backlashing, then Iâll be damned if I donât take that asshole with me. Tairn is fireproofâbut not Jack.
âFaster!â I shout, my voice desperate with worry we wonât make it in time.
Tairn charges the tower, his wings beating faster and faster, and I instinctually throw my hands forward, as though I can project all this power lashing within me toward the enemy who just tried to kill my friend, who has done his best to kill me at every opportunity.
That sizzle of magic grows to a lethal, swirling vortex of energy, and though my feet are still firmly grounded, the power rises to a breaking point and the roof of my Archives disintegrates. Power crackles above me, swirls around me, wraps along my feet below me.
I am the sky and the power of every storm that has ever been.
I am infinite.
A scream rips from my throat just as lightning splits the sky with a terrifying crack of thunder.
The bluish streak of silver death slams into the tower, and sparks flare as it explodes in a blast of stone. Tairn banks to avoid the blast, and I pivot in the saddle.
Jack falls down the mountainside in an avalanche of rock that I know he canât survive.
From the way Baide cries beneath us, she knows it, too.
My hand trembles as I sheathe the clean dagger at my ribs. The only blood to be found is on the rocks below, though I look at my hands as though they should be covered in death.
Tairn roars with the unmistakable sound of pride.
âLightning wielder.â