Illusion: Book Four of the Grimoire Saga (25 page)

Read Illusion: Book Four of the Grimoire Saga Online

Authors: S.M. Boyce

Tags: #dark fantasy, #Magic

BOOK: Illusion: Book Four of the Grimoire Saga
5.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The Lossians around the body cursed and backed away. On the floor lay a Stelian, his charcoal skin dotted with dots of blue from his kill.

Another of Blood Frine’s mandates shot through Roj’s head.
Be ready! The Stelians have taken on Kirelm forms!

More Kirelms—Stelians in disguise—poured through the opening, trapping the Lossian soldiers in the aqueduct. No time to think. Tension pulled on Roj’s shoulder blades as he prepared another attack. He funneled the energy into his palms, tugging on the air to create sharp arrows from the wind. He released shaft after shaft toward the attackers, slicing open anything within shooting distance. The Kirelms swarmed inward, several dropping like rocks to the water below and shifting as they fell.

They hadn’t even gone to the surface before the Stelians attacked. They’d known. Somehow, some way, they’d known the Lossians were there.

Roj didn’t have much time, but he had to warn the others. He stepped to the back of the onslaught and wished forth his grimoire. The book settled into his hands, and he yanked the quill from its pages. He fumbled with the inkwell around his neck until the lid popped off. He scribbled a quick note, hoping the smudges and smears would still translate into a legible warning for anyone else able to read his words.

 

We were attacked. They knew.

Chapter 18

The Innocent

 

Rieve stood beside Evelyn, her grimoire open in her hands as she watched the Ayavelian Blood in her periphery. Rieve had been a vagabond for little over a month, but she already couldn’t imagine living without the freedom that came with it.

Pulses of panic skittered through her chest with every heartbeat. Sweat lined the creases of her palms as she and Evelyn stood in silence at the edge of a cliff overlooking the Stelian castle. They should be in the melee or at least walking toward it. Instead, they simply watched, barely a few dozen feet from the lichgate into the Stele. Nothing but spires poked from the black forest, the fortress miles away. A black beast breathed fire over the walls, its massive wings casting gales that bent the trees. Garrett. From this distance, Rieve couldn’t make out the details of what the muse had transformed into, but it was as big as one of the Stelian towers. It had to be the largest thing in existence. She wondered if it had ever been a real creature or if the drenowith had simply dreamt it up.

The scene played like a theatre show, too far away to consider it real. Birds sang a few feet off. Crickets chirped. A rabbit scampered through the underbrush in a thick patch of woods to her right. Only Garrett’s occasional shriek reached her on this cliff. The wind sauntered by. And even though she could see flames and war in the distance, she couldn’t hear the screams of those dying within the black stone walls.

The contrast sent a shiver down her spine.

Evelyn’s army stood in militant rows behind Rieve, the men standing at attention shoulder to shoulder as they waited for direction. Some eyed Evelyn, the woman who controlled them. Others eyed Rieve, no doubt curious about this new girl preparing for war alongside the Blood, almost like an equal. Almost.

Rieve would have enjoyed herself if she weren’t so terrified.

She swallowed hard as Garrett screeched again. His mouth opened a second or two before it reached her ears. The Ayavelian army was too far away to be useful. Rieve wanted to point this out, to suggest they get closer, but Evelyn was no fool. She hadn’t spoken since they left home, and Rieve doubted she wanted conversation or insight from a vagabond. They stood this far away on purpose. Rieve’s mouth went dry as she tried to form words anyway, to at least point out that she noticed. The Ayavelian Blood couldn’t hide from this battle. The warriors below needed her healers.

She glanced back to her brother Zimmermann, who stood in the first row of soldiers. Before they left, he’d assured her he had a spot at the front but wouldn’t tell her how he’d gotten the promotion. She didn’t care. He was close, and only that mattered.

He nodded once without looking at her, all soldier even as he let her know she wasn’t alone. She hid a smile with her free hand and once more faced the Stele. He would never let anything happen to her.

Her grimoire trembled in her hands. Rieve flinched in surprise. Handwriting etched itself across the already open page as someone wrote in it. Kara, Richard, and Elana had already submitted their orders for the next wave to attack, so this had to be Roj. The Lossians must have begun their assault.

Evelyn snapped her head toward Rieve, a scowl marring her otherwise beautiful face. Rieve forced herself to swallow in an effort to remain calm under the queen’s glare.

“Well?” the Blood snapped.

Rieve read through the note. “The Lossians have begun. We should move out now to reach the city in time.”

There. Maybe that would be hint enough for the Blood.

Evelyn shook her head. “What exactly does it say? Read it to me verbatim.”

A shock pulsed through Rieve’s core at the queen’s silent command, which reinforced the verbal command she had given. Rieve took a deep breath, hiding the physical effect of the mandate as best she could, and read the note aloud.

“The Lossian army is spread throughout the aqueducts of the city, at least a hundred to each exit. Frine has given the order to move out.”

Evelyn’s scowl relaxed into a frown. “There’s nothing else?”

Rieve shook her head. She wanted to ask—but didn’t—what else there should be.

“Tell them Ayavel is coming as planned, then.”

Rieve sighed with relief and dipped her quill into the inkwell at her throat. But even as she went to write her first words, more appeared.

“Oh, no,” she said.

“Read it aloud, vagabond.”

“‘We were attacked. They knew.’”

Rieve tried to take a deep breath to calm herself, but it didn’t help. Betrayed. Roj thought the Lossian army had walked into a trap.

“We need to help them!” she said.

Evelyn’s frown faded into a thin line that showed no emotion. She nodded. “Tell them we’re coming.”

Rieve scribbled a note after Roj’s entry, trying her best not to let the ink blotch or smear. She blew on the note to dry the lines.

A flash of silver glinted in her peripheral vision.

At the village, the isen hunter Remy taught her how to duck and weave to avoid attacks. Since they were low on time, he wanted to focus on keeping her alive rather than teaching her to fight. Sometimes, running was the best option available—for her, it was really the only option. In the spirit of that training, Rieve’s body twisted, rolling across the ground on reflex to avoid something her brain hadn’t yet processed.

A sword.

Her book lay two feet away. Rieve hunched on a patch of dirt and stared at the sword embedded in the stone where she’d stood moments ago. Evelyn grunted and pulled her blade from the rock. Panic froze Rieve in place. Her queen had just tried to kill her.

“Restrain her!” Evelyn yelled.

The royal mandate shook Rieve once more, melting the frozen panic. She wished away her grimoire and bolted without a glance backward, running into the dark forest with no direction. Blue dust circled her head as she ran, her grimoire trying its best to dissolve into her necklace as she moved.

Her boots pounded the rock and dirt as she kept her eyes focused on the black trunks ahead. There was no path in this wood, empty as it was, so she raced through the underbrush. Fallen branches scraped her shins. Stings raced up her legs, but Rieve didn’t dare look. She had to focus on escaping—somehow.

Green lightning burst against the tree to her left. She chanced a glance backward in time to see a dozen or more soldiers chasing after her.

A bolt of air sailed by her head, missing by inches and taking several strands of hair with it. She sucked in air, trying her best not to sob as she ran. She couldn’t outrun trained soldiers.

Ahead, the forest to her left receded into the rock and revealed an opening to the woods hundreds of feet below. Rieve wondered if she could jump off and shift into a Kirelm form on her way down. The Kirelm form was the first she learned, and she was an excellent flier. It might give her an advantage, at least for a moment, but she’d never shifted midair before. It was too much pressure. She could easily fling herself off a cliff, fail the transformation, and end up killing herself for Evelyn.

She needed to hide. She needed to dodge these soldiers long enough to conceal herself.

A man grunted behind her. His boots stomped against the earth, close enough to sense through the dirt. Panic shot a fresh wave of energy through her veins. She twisted her head, hoping to see Zimmermann, but a different Ayavelian soldier glared at her a few feet behind. He would probably reach out and grab her in seconds. His eyes narrowed.

He was going to kill her, not restrain her.

Her foot caught on a branch. She stumbled to the ground, skidding over the leaves. Her palms ripped open. Silver blood streamed down the iridescent skin on her wrists. She suppressed a scream and pushed herself to her feet. The soldier grabbed her hair as he passed, apparently with too much momentum to stop himself. Her hair wrapped around his hand, yanking her scalp as he dragged her farther across the forest floor. She screamed this time.

Rieve was no fighter, but Remy had taught her a few tricks besides running.

In the split second she had before the other soldiers reached them, she focused her energy into her hands. A thin stream of lightning jumped from her fingertips, arching to hit him in the chest. He yelled and dropped, releasing her hair.

She jumped to her feet and sprang forward again, the other soldiers almost on her heels as well. She couldn’t fall again, or she would die.

Something glinted off to the right. She turned to look, but whatever it was rammed into her before she could register it as more than a blur. She collapsed into the mass. They flew sideways and, in seconds, sailed over the cliff.

Rieve screamed. Her stomach churned, heaving her breakfast nearly into her mouth. Her cheeks flushed, and she closed her lips to resist vomiting. The ground loomed closer every second, the rocks at the base of the cliff zooming toward her.

“Hush, baby girl,” a man said in her ear.

She snapped her head around. Zimmermann, already in his Kirelm form, smiled. His silver skin glowed in the dusk. He reached an arm behind her back and under her knees, lifting her to him as he flapped his wings. Their momentum slowed, and instead of falling, he glided toward the forest canopy.

Rieve laughed and wrapped her arms around his neck. She squeezed, hugging him.

He coughed. “Too tight. Too tight!”

“Sorry!”

She held on, her grip a little looser as they flew.

Men yelled from the cliff top. Rieve looked back. Soldiers grouped on the cliff face, their uniforms tightening as they shifted into Kirelms, too. She and Zimmermann only had a few seconds before these men dove as well.

A few soldiers remained in their Ayavelian forms.

“Some aren’t following us,” Rieve said.

Her brother grunted. “They probably think I’m obeying orders. We don’t have long before they figure out the truth.”

His wings pumped faster, propelling them forward and closer toward the ground. Rieve gripped his neck tighter and held her breath.

Zimmermann let out a slow breath. “When we land, we need to run as fast as we can. Got it?”

She nodded.

A bolt of lightning flew past his left wing.

He cursed. “Guess they figured it out.”

Rieve looked over his shoulder. Three soldiers chased them in Kirelm forms. One had his hands outstretched, flickers of light dancing over his fingers.

“Look out!” Rieve screamed.

Another bolt zapped Zimmermann’s wing. He cursed. They dipped, rolling toward the injured wing. Rieve held on tighter. Her brother grunted and forced his wing to hold.

A third stream of lightning flew by, missing by inches. The crackle of energy lifted the hair on Rieve’s arms. She wanted to close her eyes and wait for this to be over, but she forced herself to watch them. She wanted to warn Zimmermann of any attacks.

“Lean left!” she yelled.

Zimmermann obeyed. Lightning sailed past them.

“We’re almost to the ground,” he said.

“What are we going to do?”

“Run for Kara. We need to get out of here. Shift into a Hillsidian—they’re fast runners.”

Rieve nodded. She could do that. The only ones she hadn’t mastered were Lossian and Stelian.

Twenty feet until they reached the ground.

Rieve closed her eyes, focusing on her shift. She would take longer than Zimmermann, so she needed to start now. Her body trembled in response, prepared to change form.

A hand slapped her hard across her cheek, knocking her from Zimmermann’s arms. She fell the final fifteen feet to the earth and landed with a
thud.
A splinter of agony burst through her elbow. She screamed. Her head banged against the ground, cushioned by a bed of grass. Her vision swam. Trees blurred, blending with the sky and sometimes showing two or three copies of themselves. She blinked, trying to clear her head.

Other books

Playing with Fire by Graves, Tacie
The Twilight Lord by Bertrice Small
Burning Emerald by Jaime Reed
Exclusive by Sandra Brown, Sandra
Ex on the Beach by Law, Kim
Trapped by Jonas Saul
Monkey by Stone, Jeff