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Chapter no 8

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

Eira sat, stunned, letting the words seep into her. โ€œYouโ€ฆwill?โ€ she whispered.

โ€œDonโ€™t seem so surprised. You practically consigned your life to me. I think I came out with the better end of the deal.โ€

Still, it somehow felt like a victory. Every day Adela didnโ€™t kill her was a triumph alone. But getting the pirate queen to agree to helping her get her magic back was something Eira never expected would be possible, despite Ducotโ€™s initial optimism. Yet another bit of evidence that might suggest she was rightโ€”there was more to Adela and her than met the eye.

โ€œIt should be a relatively simple matter. Weโ€™ll first need to collect a vessel with your magic. Itโ€™ll take a while to get back to Solaris, unless you have one in Risen? Please donโ€™t tell me we have to sail all the way back to Warich simply because you overlooked grabbing one.โ€

Eiraโ€™s racing heart stopped and sank right into the darkest pit of her stomach. Of courseโ€ฆa sorcererโ€™s channel could be blocked using a Waterrunnerโ€™s magic alone, or sometimes even just through extreme trauma. But to remove that block and open the channel once more for magic to flow easily, a vessel was required. The slightest bit of magic would call to the sorcererโ€™s channel and restore the link to power.

The knowledge had been in the recesses of her mind. So far back that she hadnโ€™t remembered itโ€™d be a requisite for restoring her power. Had she just consigned herself over an impossible task? Perhaps that was why Adela had agreed so easily. She certainly had received the better end of the bargain and then some.

โ€œI never made a vessel with my magic,โ€ Eira confessed in a small voice. Adela sighed heavily and pressed her fingertips into her temple. โ€œThe Tower of Sorcerers isย stillย not having their students make vessels as a

precaution?โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve never had it recommended to me.โ€

โ€œThe fools. I swear, I would run that Tower far better than any.โ€

The mention of running the Tower brought Eiraโ€™s uncle back to the forefront of her mind. Eira struggled to push him away, but the memory of him and the explosion fed on the hopelessness that was growing within her. The monsters of doubt and sorrow were warring to consume and control, feasting on what little hope sheโ€™d mustered.

Adela remained oblivious to Eiraโ€™s turmoil. Or didnโ€™t care. Likely the latter, given how astute she was. โ€œVery well, it will be done the hard way.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ Eira blinked, the statement jarring her from the negative spiral of everything feeling hopeless. โ€œThereโ€™s a way to restore my magic without a vessel?โ€

โ€œChild, with enough power and determination there is a way to doย anything.โ€ Adela smiled confidently, borderline arrogantly. But there was something inspirational about the expression. Eira wasnโ€™t sure if she had ever met someone with so much blind faith in themselves. โ€œMost sorcerers

โ€”most people are only limited because they believe what others tell them when they hear they cannot do something. Your mind will limit you well before your body, andย thatย is why it is the first thing others will try to control.โ€

The water flowing past the portholes distracted her. Eiraโ€™s thoughts drifted just as effortlessly. โ€œI suppose I understand what you mean. I saw it in the Pillars.โ€

Adela leaned forward, holding out her hand expectantly. Eira didnโ€™t immediately understand the pirate queen was waiting on her to take it. Trying to conceal her confusion and hesitation, Eira rested her fingertips lightly on Adelaโ€™s palm. The pirate queen grabbed her fingers and flipped over Eiraโ€™s hand without warning. She ran her frozen fingertips over the lines on Eiraโ€™s palm, filling them with frost that quickly thawed in the relative heat of the cabin.

โ€œTell me of your time with the Pillars.โ€ It wasnโ€™t phrased as a question. Nothing about Adela was that delicate, or tactful. But the demand wasnโ€™t cold or harsh either.

โ€œI was captured because I followed Ducot,โ€ Eira admitted. Ducot had probably told Adela as much, but if he had, she didnโ€™t say so. Adela remained focused on Eiraโ€™s hand, leaving her with nothing to do but speak. โ€œFerro, Ulvarthโ€™s son, murdered my brother. He tried to kill me as well, but couldnโ€™tโ€ฆโ€

Eira told the pirate queen of the trials in Solaris. Of the night Marcus died. For a woman the legends painted as a ruthless killerโ€”so deadly that even the utterance of her name would bring a curseโ€”she was surprisingly easy to talk to. Perhaps it wasย becauseย Adela had that reputation that there was no fear of judgment. If the woman pillaged and murdered for sport, what did Eira have to hide or be ashamed of?

โ€œโ€ฆand now Iโ€™m here.โ€ Eiraโ€™s words were slightly raspy toward the end. Her throat sore. She must have spent at least an hour talking and Adela had done nothing but listen. โ€œThere are some other details I overlooked. But I suspect you already know them through Ducot.โ€

โ€œI prefer to get information from the source, whenever possible.โ€ Adela reached for Eiraโ€™s other hand and began the process over again. This time, it was her hand made of ice holding Eiraโ€™s, sending a chill down her spine. โ€œItโ€™s little wonder youโ€™ve handled my captivity so well.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve known hunger, and darkness, and confinement. The Pillars taught me well in those respects.โ€ Eira stared past the slow movements of Adelaโ€™s fingertip on her palm. โ€œAt least here I see the sun.โ€

Adela snorted. โ€œDonโ€™t give me an idea to take it from you.โ€

Eira quickly shifted the subject. โ€œYou said you werenโ€™t working with the Pillars now, butโ€ฆdid you ever work with the Pillars?โ€

โ€œOnce,โ€ Adela admitted with a tense expression. She rolled back her shoulders as if suddenly uncomfortable in her seat. โ€œA man sought me out, interested in some goods from Carsovia. A dangerous job and I was a fool to take it with little information.โ€

โ€œWhat did he want you to get?โ€ Eira asked.

โ€œSomething not worth the cost, in the end.โ€ She wore a grimace, her eyes clouding with an anger that wasnโ€™t directed at Eira. โ€œOnce I realized who the man commissioning me was, and his affiliations with Meru, I severed all ties and went back north.โ€

โ€œWhy do you avoid Meru?โ€

Releasing her hand, Adela leaned back. She rested her hands on the armrests of her chair, tapping them almost restlessly. โ€œI made a bargain with

someone a long time ago. They demanded I cease sailing anywhere close to Solaris or Meru and I have kept my word ever since.โ€

โ€œWho?โ€

โ€œWho else? The only person that could make me bend for themโ€ฆโ€ Adela smirked and answered coyly, โ€œThe Goddess Yargen herself.โ€

Eira rolled her eyes and looked back out the window. If Adela didnโ€™t want to tell her, she couldโ€™ve just said so. Though, she shouldnโ€™t have expected the pirate to bare her soul just because Eira had. She brought her attention back to the present. Adela didnโ€™t have to tell her things. She just had to get Eiraโ€™s magic back.

โ€œWell, can you open my channel?โ€ Eira flexed her fingertips. โ€œI donโ€™t feel any power.โ€

โ€œIf you wanted this to happen quickly, you should have made a vessel,โ€ Adela said with a slightly scolding note. โ€œBut, yes, I believe I will be able to open your channel. Though you might not enjoy the process.โ€

โ€œI will do anything to get my magic back.โ€ โ€œAnything?โ€ Adela arched her brows.

โ€œAnything.โ€ There wasnโ€™t a trace of hesitation in the word.

โ€œGood. Both hands.โ€ Adelaโ€™s waiting palms seemed harmless enough, but like prey before a predator, something within Eira knew differently.

It took actual effort to prevent her hands from quivering as she reached for Adela one more time. Her fingertips slid across the womanโ€™s palms. Adela stretched forward slightly, grabbing Eira by her wrists. Eira mirrored the movement on instinct, meeting the ice-blue eyes of the pirate queen. This close, she could see all the similarities and differences of their features. Adelaโ€™s cheeks were sharper than Eiraโ€™s, more sunken. Perhaps with age, perhaps as a function of her usual appearance. The bridge of her nose was just as narrow as Eiraโ€™s; her brow had the same slope.

โ€œBrace yourself, girl.โ€

โ€œWhat are you going toโ€”โ€ She wasnโ€™t given a chance to finish. There was no warning for what came next.

Frost ripped through her.

It raced up her arms and struck Eira square in the chest. With unseen fingers, the cold grasped for her heart. Eira gasped, choking on air. Her lungs spasmed, shuddering. Her body would shiver if her muscles werenโ€™t locking from tension the cold placed them under.

Slack-jawed, she stared at Adela, barely breathing. The invisible hands the pirate held on her lungs slowly drew air in and out, squeezing and relaxing. The chill sank down to her toes. Eiraโ€™s body emitted a faint haze as the cold condensed in the air.

Adela was doing to her what Eira had done to others. What they had talked about only a few days ago, debating better practice of. Eira was being turned into a living ice statue. She wanted to curse at the womanโ€”to spit venom. But Adela had an intense furrow to her brow, her eyes half- closed.

If she could still access magic, Eira suspected she would feel the subtle pulses of Adelaโ€™s powers through her. Probing. Perhaps trying to force open the channel.

As suddenly as the cold had come on, the magic retreated, sinking back into Adelaโ€™s hands. Eira gasped and hunched, half collapsing over herself. Her muscles felt spent, exhausted. The tension they had been placed under made it feel as if sheโ€™d run a marathon.

Adelaโ€™s grip tightened. She pulled Eira, yanking her to the edge of her chair and jerking her head up to face her. Adelaโ€™s fingertips were no doubt pressing bruises into her skin, but all Eira could focus on was her face.

โ€œI took you for stronger,โ€ Adela said briskly.

โ€œI will surprise you yet,โ€ Eira said firmly, still working to catch her breath.

โ€œWe will see about that.โ€ Adelaโ€™s fingers tensed once more.

Magic flooded her again as frozen, unseen water. Eira was pulled into the icy depths of Adelaโ€™s control. Eiraโ€™s jaw locked as she held it shut to keep her teeth from chattering so she didnโ€™t risk biting her tongue.

The entire time, she continued to keep her focus solely on Adela. Even if she couldnโ€™t speak, or change her expression, she could show with her eyes that she could handle this much.

This much and more. I welcome it, Eira thought with every bit of determination she could muster.

Just when the frost reached her head, her vision becoming tunneled, Adela relaxed her magic. Eira slumped again, though not as much as last time. Sheโ€™d known what was coming and had been ready for it.

โ€œCatch your breath.โ€ Adela loosened her grip. โ€œThatโ€™s it forโ€”โ€

It was Eiraโ€™s turn to grip Adela. Tight enough that Eiraโ€™s skin fused with the ice of Adelaโ€™s right forearm. Eira lifted her head slowly, looking through

strands of hair that had fallen into her face. โ€œAgain.โ€

โ€œDo notโ€”โ€

โ€œWe arrive in Ofok in less than two days,โ€ Eira ground out through clenched teeth, already bracing herself. โ€œAgain.โ€

A slight smile crossed Adelaโ€™s lips. โ€œVery well.โ€

 

 

On the sixth time, Adela pulled away and Eira didnโ€™t have the strength to hold on to her. She almost doubled over, catching herself by her knees. Eira thanked the Mother for the chair beneath her, otherwise she might be a puddle on the floor.

Adela stood, crossing over to the small writing desk wedged between the bookcases. Eira could no longer see the pirate queen with the curtain of hair framing her face. Her vision was too blurry at the edges to even make it worth trying. She just focused on breathing. On allowing the warmth of the room to sink into her bones and try to expel the chill that now felt like it was a part of her marrow.

A crystal-cut glass appeared in front of her face, held by a frozen arm.

Eira dragged her eyes up, meeting Adelaโ€™s. She took it skeptically.

โ€œItโ€™s not poisoned. If I am going to kill you at this point I would give you the respect of letting you know first.โ€

โ€œCareful, or Iโ€™ll think you actually like me,โ€ Eira murmured as she sank back into the chair, bringing the glass to her lips. The amber liquid was heavily spiced with cinnamon, clove, and cardamom. The drink burned all the way down, bringing warmth and instantly dulling some of her aches. Eira tipped the glass slightly, inspecting it. โ€œA warming potion?โ€

โ€œA very good liquor. The draconi arenโ€™t just known for their silks.โ€ Adela had a glass of her own and leaned forward to tip it against Eiraโ€™s. โ€œGood work today.โ€

โ€œAre you close to restoring my channel?โ€

โ€œToday was merely the beginning of learning your magical inclinations and pathways. There is still work aheadโ€ฆand much will depend on your ability to reconnect yourself as well. I canโ€™t do it all. At a point, it will be up to you to restore your connection on your own. Fortunately, our magics are

quite similarโ€ฆsimilar enough that I might be able to use my power to call out to yours in place of a vessel. Think of it like a ropeโ€”I can swing it in your direction, but youโ€™ll have to catch it.โ€

Our magics areย thatย similarโ€ฆ Eira took another sip of the liquor. It couldnโ€™t be merely chance. Her heart wouldnโ€™t believe it.

โ€œAdelaโ€”โ€

โ€œYour Banefulness,โ€ Crow interrupted, opening the door to the cabin.

Eira hadnโ€™t heard Adela summon her.

โ€œTake Eira to the crew cabin,โ€ Adela commanded. โ€œTheย crewย cabin?โ€ Crow stole Eiraโ€™s question.

โ€œGive her a hammock.โ€ Adela looked back to the windows thoughtfully. โ€œSheโ€™ll need it to recover so she wonโ€™t be utterly useless tomorrow.โ€

Eira stood, swaying slightly. Crow crossed the small cabin in a few steps, wrapping an arm around her waist. Eira glanced over her shoulder once, but Adela was focused on something elseโ€ฆsomething far beyond the here and now.

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