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Chapter no 19: A Brigadier Made of Stars

Ruthless Vows (Letters of Enchantment, 2)

Hawk Shire wasnโ€™t what Iris was expecting. Although to be honest, she wasnโ€™t sureย whatย she had thought it would be like.

All through the night ride, she had leaned back and let the motorcar hum through her bones, her eyes on the sky. The stars had glimmered overhead like devoted guardians, the western constellations guiding them onward like an arrow set to a bowstring. Iris, too electrified to sleep, had tried to envision what was to come. To prepare her statement and set a plan of action, Romanโ€™s letter tucked away in her pocket alongside Marisolโ€™s bird volume. A few times, she had let her fingertip trace the sharp corner of the folded paper, Romanโ€™s words a brilliant seam in the darkness.

I donโ€™t know how to prepare for this, Mum,ย Iris caught herself thinking, studying the stars. They continued to gleam, cold pinpricks of fire.ย I donโ€™t know what Iโ€™m doing.

The sun was rising like a bloody yolk on the horizon when Tobias geared down the roadster. Hawk Shire came into view through a veil of fog, a town spun from tall shadows in the distance. There was a patrol on the road with a crudely made barricade. Tobias brought the motorcar to a stop when a soldier lifted his hand.

โ€œThis town is closed to civilians,โ€ the soldier said in a curt tone, studying the three of them with a suspicious eye. โ€œYou should return to

where you came from.โ€

Iris sat up straighter, removing her goggles. Gods only knew what she looked like, wind-snarled hair, cheeks and shoulders freckled with mud. A desperate gleam in her eyes.

โ€œI have an important message for Captain Keegan Torres,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s very urgent. Please let us pass.โ€

The soldier merely stared at her, but his gaze dropped to the white badge on her jumpsuit, stitched over her heart.ย INKRIDDEN TRIBUNE PRESS.

โ€œIf youโ€™re here to report, Iโ€™m sorry to say thatโ€™s prohibited. This is an active war zone, closed to civilians, and youโ€”โ€

โ€œWe arenโ€™t here to report,โ€ Iris interrupted, her voice sharper than she intended. She made herself draw a deep breath, made her shoulders relax. โ€œLike I said, I am carrying an extremely important message for Captainโ€”โ€

โ€œYes, you mentioned that. What is the message?โ€

Iris hesitated. She could feel both Attie and Tobias watching her, waiting. The air suddenly felt tense. Many things had crossed her mind in the dark, but not once had she thought that they would be barred from Hawk Shire.

โ€œIt must be hand-delivered to the captain,โ€ she replied firmly. โ€œBy me.โ€

A second soldier joined the first, drawn to the motorcar. Iris watched as the two of them spoke in low tones, glancing their way with arched brows. Sweat prickled along Irisโ€™s palms as she waited; she was tempted to touch Romanโ€™s letter but resisted, tracing her wedding band instead. She inhaled draughts of air, tasting the exhaust from the car, the redolent mist, the smoke from a campfire. The sun continued to rise; the fog was melting quickly now, like snow in spring. Hawk Shire looked dark and dismal, a chain of circular stone buildings reminiscent of the points of a crown.

โ€œAll right,โ€ said the private who had first spoken to them. โ€œOnly one of you can come. Iโ€™ll escort you now.โ€

Irisโ€™s heart leapt into her throat. But she looked at Attie, who nodded solemnly in encouragement, and then Tobias, who cut the engine.

โ€œWeโ€™ll wait here for you,โ€ he said, and by the tone of his voice Iris knew nothing would make him break his word.

It gave her the confidence to step out of the roadster, chin lifted high. Her legs felt weak from hours of sitting, but she followed the private around the barricade and up the road. They passed a sea of linen tents. Rings of soldiers sitting around campfires as they fried links of sausage and eggs in cast iron skillets. A line of parked lorries splattered with mud, the sunrise limning their cracked windshields and bullet-sprayed fenders. The air was solemn and silent and still, as if Envaโ€™s forces had been defeated, and it made the hair stand up on Irisโ€™s arms.

Wordlessly, she followed the private into town, gazing up at the buildings of Hawk Shire. One in the center of town caught her eye. It was very tall and wideโ€”four stories high with several sets of chimneysโ€”and built from red brick and shining glass windows. A factory, Iris realized, with modest houses strung around it like dew on a cobweb.

The private led her through a wide city market, and Iris stopped abruptly. Over the cobblestones, cots and makeshifts beds were set up in rows, wounded soldiers lying on tattered blankets. The soldiers far outnumbered the doctors and nurses, who seemed to be in constant motion, moving from cot to cot, carrying bedpans, bloodied bandages, and cups of water. Not even the gray-tinged sunshine could hide the exhaustion and concern etched onto their faces.

The staggering number of wounded stole Irisโ€™s breath; it made her think of Forest. Of Roman. She forced herself to continue following the private into the factory, although her thoughts bent to one horrible question: how would Envaโ€™s forces evacuate all the wounded before Dacre arrived?

The private led her up flights of metal stairs to the uppermost level, passing a few long-faced soldiers along the way. Again, Iris was surprised by how quiet it was, as if no one had the heart to speak. As if they were simply holding their breath and waiting for Dacre to come and crush them, one last time.

โ€œIn here,โ€ the private said, opening a squeaky door. โ€œThe brigadier will meet with you soon.โ€

Iris stepped into the room, jolted by his words. โ€œTheย brigadier? I asked to speak with Captain Keegan Torres.โ€

The private only sighed and shook his head. He closed the door, leaving her alone in the chamber, which Iris turned to take in. It was a long and narrow room, with a threadbare rug along the hardwood floor, a stained walnut desk covered in papers and wax-dribbled candelabras, and one wall full of windows. It was to these windows that Iris was drawn, realizing the glass afforded her a birdโ€™s-eye view of Hawk Shire, as well as the deep blue horizon of the west.

She watched as the fog continued to recoil. She could see the market square once more, her heart aching as she studied the rows of wounded soldiers. A doctor strode from one building to another, blood on her clothes. Nurses carried a stretcher, the body draped in a white sheet.

Irisโ€™s eyes eventually settled on a pair of vultures, perched on a nearby roof.

She stared at the birds as they sunned their wings, wondering if they had followed her from River Down. With an anxious twitch of her hands, Iris reached into her pocket and retrieved Marisolโ€™s book. She sifted through the worn pages, admiring the intricate illustrations, until she came to the page devoted to nightingales. There her eyes remained, reading through the fine- print description:

A small and secretive bird that is rather plain to behold, the Nightingale is difficult to spot. They keep to thick cover, and while their feathers might be unexciting, they have a repertoire of more than two hundred different phrases that they can sing.

The door creaked open.

Iris closed the book, her mouth suddenly dry. All the words seemed to scatter from her thoughts as she turned away from the windows, preparing to ask for Keegan again. But Iris stopped short, her breath catching.

Itย wasย Keegan. Marisolโ€™s wife stood tall and proud in her green uniform, three golden stars pinned over her breast. Her blond hair was slicked back and her jaw was set, as if she too had come to this meeting with preconceptions. Her dark eyes were keen but red-rimmed, as if she hadnโ€™t slept a full night in weeks, and her expression was inscrutable. Her mouth was set in a line that looked chiseled from stone.

โ€œCapโ€”Brigadier Torres,โ€ Iris said. โ€œI know you probably donโ€™t remember me, but Iโ€™mโ€”โ€

โ€œIris Winnow,โ€ Keegan said, shutting the door behind her. โ€œOf course I remember you. Didnโ€™t I oversee your vows in the garden? My wife is very fond of you and Attie, as well as your Kitt. But what in all the godsโ€™ names are you doing here?โ€

Iris drew a deep breath. โ€œI have a message I think you should see.โ€ โ€œA message?โ€

โ€œYes. Iโ€ฆโ€ How much to say? Iris reached into her pocket again, withdrawing Romanโ€™s letter. โ€œPlease read this.โ€

She gave the letter to Keegan, watching as the brigadier read Romanโ€™s words. Keeganโ€™s expression didnโ€™t change; indeed, Iris was beginning to believe that the brigadier might doubt it all, and Iris didnโ€™t know what she would do if that happened. But then Keegan exhaled sharply and met Irisโ€™s gaze. Her eyes glittered as if she had just been shaken from a dream.

โ€œHow did you get this, Iris?โ€

โ€œI have a magical connection to Roman through our typewriters,โ€ Iris began. She shared everything with Keegan, from the beginning in Oath when they were mere rivals at the paper to where she stood now, writing to her husband even though he was Dacreโ€™s prisoner and couldnโ€™t even remember her name.

โ€œI know it sounds impossible, but Roman wouldnโ€™t lie to me,โ€ she finished, surprised by the hoarseness in her tone. She swallowed the lump in her throat, but it only wedged in her chest, and she knew it was the grief she hadnโ€™t allowed herself to process. Grief over Roman being a captive, his mind scrambled by Dacreโ€™s magic. Grief that whatever they once had might not ever be recovered.

She was very good at burying things like that, her anguish and her sorrow and sometimes even the reality of what she faced. But she didnโ€™t quite know how to let them go without losing vital pieces of herself.

Keegan was silent, staring down at Romanโ€™s typed words again. โ€œWhen did you receive this letter?โ€

โ€œYesterday morning. I came as soon as I read it. We drove all night from Bitteryne.โ€

โ€œWhich means we only have another day or so before Dacre attacks, if what Roman says is true.โ€ Keegan rolled her lips together but then glanced at Iris. โ€œWho isย we? You said you drove here with someone?โ€

โ€œAttie and Tobias Bexley.โ€ โ€œWhere are they now?โ€

โ€œAt the barricade in the motorcar, waiting for me to return.โ€

โ€œThen the three of you must be exhausted and hungry. Iโ€™ll send breakfast for you, as well as find you all a quiet room to rest.โ€ Keegan strode to the door and opened it, murmuring to a soldier waiting in the hallway.

Iris hesitated, her eyes drifting to Romanโ€™s letter, still in Keeganโ€™s hand. โ€œGo with Private Shepherd. Heโ€™s going to take you to a room on the

lower floor to rest and eat,โ€ Keegan said, glancing back at Iris. But she must have seen the stricken light in Irisโ€™s eyes. The brigadier softened her tone, adding, โ€œDonโ€™t worry. I need to speak to my officers, but Iโ€™ll come find you in a little bit, after youโ€™ve rested.โ€

โ€œOf course,โ€ Iris whispered with a half smile. โ€œThank you, Brigadier Torres.โ€

But despite her relief at having delivered the news in time, Iris still found it hard to quit the room, to follow another stranger, leaving Romanโ€™s letterโ€”burn my wordsโ€”behind to an unknown fate.

 

 

None of them planned to sleep for more than an hour, but after a warm fare of eggs and buttered toast, accompanied by watered-down chicory with no sugar and only a splash of cream, Iris, Attie, and Tobias fell into a deep slumber on the cots Keegan had provided. They had been given an inner room in the factory, one with no windows, and the darkness felt like a balm until Iris was woken by the distant sound of a violin.

It was playing a poignant, lovely song, one that filled Iris with nostalgia, and she rose from her cot and followed the music out of the dark room.

She walked down the hallway, the violinโ€™s melody growing louder, as if she was on the cusp of finding it. She turned a corner and nearly ran into her mother.

Aster was leaning against the wall, wrapped in her purple coat with a cigarette smoldering in her fingers.

โ€œThere you are, darling,โ€ she said brightly. โ€œHave you come to enjoy the music with me?โ€

Iris frowned, unsettled. โ€œWho is playing the violin?โ€

โ€œDoes it matter? Listen, Iris. Listen to the notes. Tell me if you know them.โ€

Iris fell quiet. She listened to the violin, and while the music curled through her like sun-warmed vines, there was no recognition. She had never heard this song before.

โ€œI donโ€™t know it, Mum,โ€ she confessed, watching a furrow form in Asterโ€™s brow. โ€œAnd why are you here?โ€

Aster opened her mouth, but her voice was robbed as the colors began to melt together. Iris felt a prick of fear, watching the features of her motherโ€™s face begin to smudge, until she raised her own hands and saw they were also fading, breaking into hundreds of stars.

โ€œThis is a dream,โ€ she panted. โ€œWhy do you keep appearing to me, Mum?โ€

The floor shook and cracked beneath her boots. Iris was about to fall through the widening crevice when she gasped and sat forward, blinking into the peaceful dark. It took her a moment to gain her bearings, but she remembered where she was. She could hear Attie, her breathing heavy with dreams, in the cot next to her, and Tobiasโ€™s soft snores on the other side of the room. There was no way to tell the time, and Iris ran her fingers through her tangled hair as she set her feet on the floor. There, she felt it again. A steady rumbling.

Iris slipped from the room and moved down the hallway, searching for someone to tell her what was happening, but she soon found the answer herself when she passed a set of windows. She paused, watching the doctor she had seen earlier help load a line of wounded patients into the back of a lorry. Another truck was passing by on the road, brimming with soldiers.

It was Keeganโ€™s forces, Iris realized. They must be retreating from Hawk Shire.

They believed Romanโ€™s words.

Iris rushed down the long hallway, through amber squares of sunlight. It looked to be midafternoon, and every minute suddenly felt dire. She slipped out the door and approached one of the nurses in the market square.

โ€œWhat can I do?โ€ Iris asked.

The nurse glanced her over, sweat beading on her face. โ€œIf you want, you can help us load the wounded into that lorry.โ€

Iris nodded and hurried to the closest cot, where a young man with bandages on his face was struggling to sit forward.

โ€œHere,โ€ Iris said. โ€œTake my hand.โ€ She eased him to his feet and offered him balance, walking him toward the truck. The lorry was nearly full, the wounded packed in close together. As Iris helped the soldier up the ramp and into the back, worry flooded her lungs.

They couldnโ€™t leave any of the wounded behind. Not with Dacreโ€™s imminent arrival. He would heal these soldiers only to use them for his own gains.

โ€œIris!โ€

She turned to see Attie and Tobias hurrying through the chaos. Iris wove her way to them, heart drumming in her ears.

โ€œThey believed Romanโ€™s warning?โ€ Attie said in a low but hopeful tone. โ€œYes.โ€ Iris tucked a tangle of hair behind her ear. She realized there was blood on her hands. โ€œTheyโ€™re loading all the wounded, but Iโ€™m not sure whereโ€”โ€ She cut herself off when she caught sight of Keegan approaching

them. โ€œBrigadier Torres.โ€

โ€œI was just coming to wake you,โ€ Keegan said. โ€œEvacuations have commenced, and the three of you should depart as swiftly as you arrived.โ€

โ€œWhere are you evacuating to?โ€ Attie asked.

โ€œTo Oath,โ€ Keegan replied. โ€œWe are the last of Envaโ€™s forces. And we will make our final stand in the city.โ€

Those words went through Iris as a shiver. She studied Keeganโ€™s face. โ€œYou are the last?โ€

โ€œOur battalions holding the southern front have fallen. Dacre has killed and taken a great number of our soldiers. And I will not let him capture and turn this final brigade.โ€

โ€œThen let us help you with the wounded,โ€ Tobias offered. โ€œWe can stay and get them safely loaded.โ€

Keegan shook her head. โ€œYou should leave immediately. I couldnโ€™t bear it should something happen to you three.โ€

โ€œBut nor can we leave you and the wounded behind,โ€ Iris insisted. โ€œPlease,ย Brigadier.โ€

Keegan hesitated but held Irisโ€™s gaze. Maybe she saw it in Irisโ€™s eyes: a glimmer of the past. That fateful day in the bluff when Keegan had delivered a letter to Iris. Words that had conveyed that Forest wasnโ€™tย deadย butย wounded.ย And how that message had strengthened Irisโ€™s resolve to stay behind rather than evacuate with the rest of the town residents.

โ€œIf I let you stay and help,โ€ Keegan began, โ€œthen youโ€™ll be at the back of a slow line of lorries. Youโ€™ll be in a very vulnerable position if Dacre decides to pursue us.โ€

โ€œI know a shortcut,โ€ Tobias countered. โ€œFrom my early post-running days. Your troops will be taking the high road to Oath, Brigadier?โ€

โ€œYes. Why?โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re in my roadster, and I can drive us down the narrow but faster Hawthorne Route, which will have us meeting up with your brigade in River Down in no time.โ€

Iris held her breath as she waited for Keeganโ€™s response. Her fingers instinctively went to the locket hanging from her neck.

โ€œAll right,โ€ Keegan relented. โ€œThe three of you can stay and assist. But when I say itโ€™s time for you to go, you take Hawthorne Route and you donโ€™t look back. Agreed?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ Iris answered in unison with Tobias and Attie.

The brigadier withdrew a crinkled sheet of paper from her pocket. Romanโ€™s letter, Iris realized, and a sigh escaped her when Keegan gave it back to her.

โ€œThank you for delivering this message,โ€ Keegan said. โ€œFor driving through the night to reach us in time. I will always be indebted to you three.โ€

Irisโ€™s throat went narrow. She only nodded, tucking the paper into her pocket. But as she began to guide soldiers to the lorry, she couldnโ€™t help but

think of Roman, deep in the earth. Walking ever closer through those tangled ley lines, somewhere just beneath her feet.

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