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Chapter no 16

An Heir of Frost (A Trial of Sorcerers, #4)

Fortunately for them, it seemed like the guards werenโ€™t paying close attention to the trio running along the rooftops, instead focusing on the boat still drifting down the river. That meant they had the

element of surprise at best. Or, at worst, a few extra moments.

โ€œThereโ€™s a door down there.โ€ Eira pointed to a door at the base of the archway that was guarded by a man and a woman.

โ€œWeโ€™ll be met with resistance on the inside route.โ€ Olivin took a step closer to her, holding out his hands. โ€œThereโ€™s a faster way, if I may?โ€

โ€œGo ahead.โ€ Eira didnโ€™t even have to think about it; the only thing that mattered was moving as quickly as possible. She wasnโ€™t sure what he had been planning on doing, but she certainly hadnโ€™t been expecting him to sweep her off her feet.

Olivin leaned forward, wrapped an arm around her back and reached down behind her knees. Despite her surprise, instinct to stabilize herself kicked in. Eira wrapped her arms around his shoulders, holding on tightly as he straightened. The odd feeling of weightlessness settled into her lower stomach as he lifted her, adjusting slightly, settling her weight in his arms.

โ€œIโ€™m capable of walking, you know,โ€ she murmured. A crack of distant lighting lit up his profile in sharp outlines that quickly faded into the night. She shifted her grip. It somehow resulted in her being pressed even more tightly against himโ€ฆnot that it should have been possible.

โ€œNot like this.โ€ Olivin shook his head and looked up at the archway with fierce determination. He began running to the edge of the rooftop.

โ€œOlivin?โ€ Eiraโ€™s voice grew somewhat shrill with panic. โ€œWhatโ€”โ€

As he jumped, he said, โ€œMysst xieh.โ€

Light spun from underneath his toes, forming a circular disk.ย Mysst xieh

โ€”shield. Eira had always known it for use in combat. But Olivin used it like a stepping stone, sinking into his right leg before lunging forward.

โ€œMysst xieh!โ€ Another circle of light appeared, this time under his left foot. Olivin sank low again and then bounced upward.

Circle of light by circle of light, they made their way upward. Yonlin was behind them, doing the same. Eira was vaguely reminded of how Cullen could step on pockets of air to rise upward. But she had never joined him while he was performing the act.

She had moments of weightlessness combined with seconds where her stomach was in her throat before Olivin landed on solid magic once more and repeated the process. Again, and again, they rose.

Until a beam of lightย whizzedย by Olivinโ€™s head. He swayed, falling to the side.

โ€œOlivin!โ€ Eira shouted. She was helpless to be of assistance. If sheโ€™d had her magic, she could summon a ledge of ice for them to land on. But all she could do was cling to him as they fell through the open air.

โ€œMysst xieh!โ€ he shouted, almost deafeningly loud in her ear. A circle of light spun out beneath him.

Almost at the same time, Yonlin said, โ€œMysst soto gotha.โ€

Bow, Eiraโ€™s mind filled in at the exact same time as the weapon condensed from strands of magic into Yonlinโ€™s hands. He drew back, and fired down at the people who had been shooting up at them.

โ€œGet her up,โ€ Yonlin shouted between shots. โ€œYonlinโ€”โ€

โ€œGo, Olivin!โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll return fire when Iโ€™m up,โ€ Olivin called back, already working his magic to get them to a window at the top of the archway.

Eiraโ€™s stomach had dropped out from her body since the fall. She continued to cling to him with all her might. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, Olivin,โ€ she whispered.

โ€œYonlin knows the risks, as do I.โ€ He seemed to shift his grip to hold her even tighter. Eira could see him swallow hard. โ€œWeโ€™re better off helping you, no matter the cost.โ€

โ€œI wanted to keep you safe.โ€ Sheโ€™d wanted to keep all her friends safe, and only seemed successful at endangering them more.

โ€œAnd I wanted to stay by you.โ€

Loyalty has a cost. Eira pressed her eyes closed and drew a shuddering breath. She would pay any costโ€ฆbut she wasnโ€™t ready for what it might cost to those around her. The people she cared about.

The people she loved.

As soon as Olivin landed by the window, Eira smashed it in with the butt of her dagger. He wasted no time and they tumbled in through the confetti of glassโ€”enduring superficial cuts and scrapes along the way.

โ€œLumeriaโ€™s murderers!โ€ a man shouted, lunging for them.

Eira recovered faster than Olivin. She tumbled and jumped up, ignoring the pain in her arms and legs from embedded glass as she dodged the manโ€™s sword. Eira swung and dug her dagger into his chest.

Clumsy.

He half wheezed, half snarled, rearing back to attack her again with his sword.

โ€œMysst soto tonc.โ€ Light flashed. A spear wielded by Olivin pierced the knightโ€™s shoulder, cutting through the soft spot between plates of armor. He dropped his sword and it unraveled into strands of light that faded away.

Eira freed her blade and jabbed it into the manโ€™s neck, ending it there. She panted, turning to Olivin. But he was back at the window already, returning fire so Yonlin could join them.

โ€œIโ€™m going ahead,โ€ she announced. โ€œEira, wait!โ€

She didnโ€™t hesitate. Eira wouldnโ€™t allow the fact that she had no magic to hold her back, or be a burden to the people counting on her. Another gate guard in leather armor engaged her. He clearly hadnโ€™t had much practical application to his training as she managed to disarm and mortally wound him in a few blows.

But he didnโ€™t have a signet of a Pillar, so Eira left him to bleed. Perhaps he would dieโ€ฆor maybe he could hang on for help to arrive. Eira knew that it didnโ€™t make her any less guilty of attacking an innocent man. But hopefully he kept his life. Her qualm wasnโ€™t with the people of Meru, just the Pillars.

Bursting through a door at the top of an ascending hallway, Eira was faced with a mechanical roomโ€”blessedly void of any other knights. Panting, she took quick stock of the elements of the portcullis. As Yonlin had said, there was a spindle connected to two chains on the right. On the

left was a lever connected to weights by more chains that was already engaged.ย That must be the quick release. Eira was still figuring out how it worked when Olivin and Yonlin arrived.

โ€œYou take that side.โ€ Yonlin pointed to the side closest to the door theyโ€™d entered in on. โ€œWe pull in threeโ€ฆtwoโ€ฆone.ย Kot sidee.โ€

The two men worked in unison, standing before the massive spoked wheels that were on the ends of the spindle above the portcullis. The chains and spindle were so large it would take two or three grown adults, per side, to move the gate. As Yonlin and Olivin spoke, glyphs appeared on the opposite side of the wheels. The magic crashed into the spokes as it was sucked in toward their palms, pulling the wheels in the process. As soon as the magic met their hands, it vanished completely.

They repeated again. โ€œKot sidee.โ€

As the gears turned, the gate slowly began to lift; hefty chain collected around the spindle. In tandem, the weighted mechanism connected to the lever sheโ€™d been inspecting began to move as well. With every turn of the gears behind her, there was a clicking of the winch behind the lever. As soon as the gate was up, she would find a way to disable it.

But in the meantime, Eira focused on the doors on the left and right sides of the room. There were heavy bars to the right of each of them that slotted into hooks on either side of the metal doors. The builders had planned for a potential attack and wanted this room to be easily guarded.

No sooner had she managed to get the bars in place than the doors began to rattle. A moment of silence. And then the whole door shuddered.

โ€œWe have to move.โ€ Eira turned back to them. The churning of gears and clanking of chain had slowed. Yonlin was breathless.

Sweat dripped off Olivinโ€™s nose. โ€œWeโ€™re going as fast as we can.โ€ Eira stepped in for Yonlin, grabbing the wheel. โ€œTake a break.โ€ โ€œItโ€™s too heavy.โ€

โ€œI can get a turn or two.โ€ She looked to Olivin. โ€œOn three.โ€

Eira managed three turns of the wheel. Blood poured from around the shards of glass in her arms. Muscles threatened to give out. Her palms almost instantly became raw from how tightly she clutched the spokes. Gritting her teeth, she stayed focused, pulling as hard as she could while ignoring the pain. The screams and shouts outside were barely audible from within the stone room. But, in her mindโ€™s eye, she could see the boat

making its way to the portcullis by the flashes of magic that sparked around it.

โ€œWeโ€™re almost there,โ€ Olivin encouraged. โ€œA little bit more and the ship should be able to fit under.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m going to disable the quick drop!โ€ Eira crossed to the other side of the room, leaving Yonlin to finish the job. The stone around the doors was beginning to crack. The guards, or Pillars, were going to burst through soon.

Eira knelt by the lever and sucked in a breath, holding it. Her nerves were on fire. Hands trembling. If she got this wrong, the gate would fall immediately. The boat would be locked in. Or, worse, the portcullis would fall on the boat itself. Visions of it being cleaved in two, her friends on it, flashed through Eiraโ€™s mind. She pressed her eyes closed and banished the notion, exhaling and forcing the wound-up tension in her muscles to abate. She had to think clearly.

There was a connection point between the lever and the locking mechanism that clicked with every turn of the wheels on the opposite side of the room. If she disconnected it here, then the lever would no longer undo the lock. Eira dug the side of her dagger into a pin holding a gear in place. She pulled. The gear popped off.

Nothing happened.

A small laugh of relief escaped her. The locking mechanism still clicked into place. But the lever was limp and useless.

โ€œI think thatโ€™s enough.โ€ The portcullis was two thirds up. But the doors on either side of the room were going to give in. With both menโ€™s attention on her, Eira pointed to the left of the leverโ€”the one that overlooked the sea and a horizon that meant freedom. โ€œSmash this wall.โ€

โ€œWhat? Why?โ€ Even though Olivin was confused, he still crossed over anyway, readying his stance.

โ€œHow else will we get out of here?โ€ Eira motioned to the doors and Olivinโ€™s expression flashed from exhaustion to panic, as if seeing the full extent of their current situation for the first time.

โ€œAfter everythingโ€ฆI donโ€™t know if I have the power to walk us down like we got up here.โ€

โ€œThen we jump. Itโ€™s a shipping channel, the water should be deep.โ€ Eira knew how quickly the drop-off was in Oparium by the docks so the large ships could get into the wharf. It was regularly dredged by Groundbreakers and Waterrunners to avoid ships running aground.

โ€œFrom this high?โ€ Yonlin looked warily out the window. โ€œDo either of you have a better idea?โ€

Olivin shook his head and his expression hardened into grim determination. โ€œJuth calt.โ€

Yonlin joined him. โ€œJuth calt.โ€

It was a race to see which stone wall would give firstโ€”the walls around the doors, or the one by the window. Which magic was stronger? She ran back to the opposite side as they worked, peering through the bars and out the window. The boat was just about at the arch.

They could walk, or jump down, and then Adela would scoop them from the waterโ€ฆย It would work. It had to. A sharp crack and burst of sound accompanied the stone crumbling next to the window. Olivin and Yonlin had broken through.

โ€œLetโ€™s go.โ€ Eira wasted no time wrapping her arms around Olivinโ€™s neck.

โ€œYou areย suchย a demanding creature,โ€ he mumbled as he picked her up. She could feel his muscles tremble under her weight, but he steadied himself the moment she was enveloped in his embrace. Somehow, despite how exhausted they both were, Eira felt safe in his arms.

โ€œYouโ€™d be much better off without me,โ€ she agreed, her words almost vanishing underneath the howling wind and rain.

โ€œI never said that.โ€ His stormy eyes glanced her way. Time halted briefly, hanging on an inhale.ย Kiss him; youโ€™re probably about to die, might as well. The thought streaked through her mind, but he spoke before she could act on it. โ€œReady?โ€

โ€œAs Iโ€™ll ever be.โ€

โ€œLetโ€™s go, Yonlin.โ€ Olivin jumped out into the air. โ€œMysst xieh!โ€ He landed hard on a glowing disk. It wobbled underneath him.

Eira clutched tighter as Olivin regained his balance, not wanting her weight to tip him more to one side or another. โ€œWeโ€™re almost there,โ€ she offered optimistically.

โ€œIโ€™m not sureโ€”โ€

โ€œDrop me, if weโ€™re going to fall.โ€ โ€œEiraโ€ฆโ€

She met his eyes. โ€œIf we fall, go feet first. Drop me and make yourself as straight as possible.โ€ Sheโ€™d learned a few things on the docks of Oparium.

He nodded and stepped off the glyph. โ€œMysst xieh.โ€

Yonlin was right over his shoulder. The ship was crossing under the portcullis. Noelle, Lavette, and Varren were at the stern of the vessel, returning bursts of magic with their own alongside half the crew. Cullen manned the sails. Alyss and Ducot managed to keep the ship patched as quickly as it was damaged. Adela was at the front of the vessel, stoic and poised, eyes turned to the safety of the sea beyond.

They were going to make it. It was going to work.

Everything seemed to slow as Eira met Adelaโ€™s determined gaze. A slight smile crossed the pirate queenโ€™s lips.ย Good job,ย it seemed to say. Joy swelled in Eiraโ€™s chest nearly to the point of bursting. For the first time in her life, it felt like sheโ€™d made someone proudโ€”someone she looked to almost as a child would a parent.

It all happened so quickly. In a blink, there was an explosion high above.

Adelaโ€™s attention jerked upward. Fractures spread across the archway like lightning bolts. The guards mustโ€™ve broken through the door with an explosion of their ownโ€ฆbut they didnโ€™t know the building had already been weakened by Olivin and Yonlin smashing down the wall so the three of them could escape.

The archway crumbled. Light flashed. Chains snapped.

Eira inhaled sharply as the portcullis came rattling down. Olivin looked over his shoulder on instinct. His focus wavered and that was all it took for his magic to falter.

Eira, and everything else, tumbled down with deadly speed into the cold sea.

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