What we know about dragonkind is nothing compared to what we donโt.
โColonel Kaoriโs Field Guide to Dragonkind
What in the actual fuck. I draw back and stare at the irid, the knife loose in my grip.
Dragons donโt speak to humans theyโre not bonded to, yet that deep, gruff voice definitely does not belong to Tairn.
โWhat is goingโโ Ridoc starts, coming up behind me. โOh shit.โ
Half the dragon heads swing his way as he runs toward me, while the other half keep their eyes and enormous jaws pointed in my direction.
โAre we happy?โ he asks as he reaches my side in his bare feet. โAre we scared?โ
I nod.
โWhy do you not answer me?โ the dragon asks.
โPerhaps the human female lacks intelligence,โ a high voice chimes in, and the dragon on the right lifts her head.
My jaw drops. Guess arrogance is a universal dragon trait.
โSheโs just surprised.โ Andarna rises, but she leaves her head level with the others. โAnd youโre in her face.โ
To my complete and utter shock, all six dragons take a step back.
โThank you,โ Andarna says.
โYou speak our language?โ I ask the irids.
โWe are magic,โ the male replies like itโs the most obvious reason in the world.
โDid they just respect your personal space?โ Ridoc whispers, then yanks his hands over his ears and flinches. โWhat was that?โ
โIt is rude to speak as though we cannot hear you,โ the female says from the right.
Ridocโs eyes widen.
โIt is more offensive to lift a blade at us.โ The snappy schoolteacher voice comes from the left, I think.
โI donโt know you, and Iโm not going to let you hurt her.โ I glare at the one whose scales flicker to green.
โAnd you feel a dagger is sufficient.โ Her nostrils flare. โI believe you are right, Dasyn. The human female lacks intelligence.โ
Rude. But sheโs right about the first part. I sheathe the dagger.
โYou are irid.โ The male in front of us changes the subject, his giant head tilting as he studies Andarna.
Her scales change from black to the green of the jungle, then ripple to blue, mirroring the sky just like the male. โI am irid.โ
โHoly shit,โ Ridoc says. โWas that Andarna?โ
โI think when they make that whistle sound, it connects you to the irids,โ I mutter.
โYet you choose black as your resting color?โ the female asks Andarna from the right.
โIt is acceptable in my hoโโ She breathes out in a huff. โIn Navarre.โ
The one diagonally to my left lifts their head. โShe is the criterion.โ
The other five flinch and draw back.
โIs that a good thing?โ Ridoc signs.
โI donโt know,โ I sign back, my heartbeat easing slightly as they give us a little more space.
Wingbeats fill the air and the iridsโ heads lift skyward as darkness falls on top of us. Tairn lands hard, shaking the ground like thunder, his back claws digging into the sand to the left of Ridoc and the right of Andarna.
My heart stutters, and I canโt decide if Iโm more relieved that heโs arrived or increasingly terrified at the thought of losing them both should the irids attack.
Dragons arenโt exactly predictable, and I know nothing about the ones in front of us.
โMy human,โ Tairn warns, swinging his tail. Trees crackle and crash behind us as he snaps his teeth at the irids. At least, I think thatโs whatโs happening, but all I can see is his underbelly and the legs of the irids.
โNo!โ Andarna scrambles out from beneath him and pivots as though staring him down. โThey wonโt hurt her. Theyโre my family.โ She turns in a circle. โSheโs my human, too.โ
My stomach twists. They might be her family, but she doesnโt know them, and thereโs every chance theyโll kill us all. Weโve been so busy trying to find them that we havenโt given much thought to what would happen when we did.
โAre humans so rare in Navarre that you must share?โ the female on the left snaps.
โDo you not have another one under there?โ a different voice asks.
Something drips to the left, and my gaze jumps past a smiling Ridoc.
Aotrom slithers forward at Tairnโs side, saliva dripping from his exposed fangs as he emerges from the trees. He growls low in his throat, giving a warning I donโt need translated.
Mine.
โWe have no interest in the humans,โ the male declares. โAnd no quarrel with either of you. Weโve come only to speak to the irid.โ
โAndarna,โ Tairn corrects him.
โAndarna,โ the female to the right says gently.
Tairn retreats step by careful step until Ridoc and I stand between his front claws, his back ones filling the space his tail just cleared.
โAt least now we can see something before we die,โ Ridoc signs, then shrugs.
โWeโre not going to die,โ I sign back. My longing for Rhi and Sawyer to be here to see this equals my gratitude that theyโre not in danger.
Tairnโs head hovers just above us, level with Aotromโs. Clearly, heโs with Ridoc on this one.
Andarna swings to face us, her eyes dancing with palpable excitement. โSee? They wonโt hurt you.โ
โI see.โ I nod, not wanting to kill the moment for her.
โOh my.โ The female on the right gasps.
โWhat have you done to your tail?โ The one on the left reels back.
Andarna cranes her neck to check her scorpiontail. โNothing. Itโs fine.โ
My gaze jumps from irid to irid, my stomach sinking lower as I count from one to six.
Theyโre all feathertails.
โTell us what theyโve done to you,โ the male in front of us demands.
โDone to me? I chose my tail.โ Andarnaโs tone shifts defensively. โAs is my right upon transition from juvenile to adolescent.โ
The irids fall silent, and not in a good way.
The male in the center lies down and wraps his tail around his torso. โTell us how you came to choose it.โ
Andarna lifts her head to her full height as the irids lie down one by one.
โIs this really about to be story time?โ Ridoc signs.
โYou know as much as I do,โ I sign back.
A corner of his mouth quirks as his hands fly. โFirst time for everything.โ
Wood crunches as Tairn and Aotrom take the same position, leaving us standing between Tairnโs outstretched claws.
Andarna sits just ahead of us to the right, her tail swishing across the sand. โI blinked in and out of consciousness in my shell yearsโโ
โWeโre going to be here awhile,โ Ridoc signs, then plops his ass down in the sand.
I slowly lower myself to do the same as she tells her story to a captive audience.
Itโs only when she describes Presentation that the irids begin to throw questions at her.
โWhy would you present yourself to a human?โ
โNo, they present themselves to us.โ Andarnaโs tail flicks. โSo we can decide if we should allow them to continue on to Threshing or turn them into char marks.โ
The irids all gasp, and Ridoc and I share a confused look. Iโm guessing they donโt bond to humans.
โSeeing as Iโm the eldest of my den in Navarre, there was no other to object to my Right of Benefaction,โ she continues with excitement and more than a little pride, which makes me smile. โAnd so Threshing began.โ
Itโs fascinating to hear it from her point of view.
โWhy would you participate in harvest?โ the female on the left asks.
โItโs just what we call it when we select our humans for bonding,โ Andarna explains. โSo I went into the woodsโโ
โYou bonded as a juvenile?โ the male to the right shouts.
Tairn cranes his neck forward and growls. โYou will not raise your voice to her.โ
Andarna turns her head and narrows her eyes at Tairn. โDo not ruin this for me.โ
Hurt stabs through the bond and Tairn recoils, his head drawing back to cover Ridoc and me.
Ouch. My chest tightens, but thereโs nothing I can say to him and no way to say it without chancing the rest of them hearing me.
Andarna continues with our story. She tells them about Jack and Oren, about how I defended her, about Xaden and the rebellion.
โSo naturally, I slowed time,โ she tells them when recounting the attack in my bedchamber.
โYou used your juvenile gift for a human?โ the female on the left questions.
โI donโt like her,โ Ridoc signs.
โMe either,โ I respond in kind.
โFor my human.โ Andarna tilts her head. โShe is part of me, as I am of her. You undervalue our connection.โ That last bit reeks of adolescent snark.
โMy apologies,โ the female says.
โDamn, this breed apologizes,โ Ridoc signs, lifting his brows. โMaybe we should have held out.โ
I roll my eyes.
โDo you not bond humans?โ Andarna asks, and I lean forward, resting my forearms on my knees.
โWe do not live with humans,โ she answers.
โIs it just the six of you?โ Andarnaโs head swivels to look at them.
โThere are hundreds of us,โ the male to the left replies, speaking for the first time. โPlease continue.โ
The swirl pattern in his horns reminds me of Andarnaโs. Maybe theyโre from the same den.
More than an hour passes as she conveys every detail, as if forgetting one facet might alter whatever is about to happen.
When she starts to tell them about War Games, then Resson, my muscles tense, and I fight my own memories from interceding, fight the inevitable wave of grief that rises when she speaks of Liam and Deigh.
โAnd so I flew into the battle!โ She pounces up on all fours.
Thereโs more than one set of narrowed golden eyes.
โAnd Violet channeled my powerโโ
Two of them inhale sharply, and my stomach full-on knots.
โI donโt think this is going as well as she thinks it is,โ I sign to Ridoc.
โWhy? Sheโs incredible,โ he signs back. โBrave. Fierce. Vicious. Everything the Empyrean respects.โ
But the way the irids look at her says otherwise.
โAnd we slowed time so that she could strike!โ Andarna tells the story with an enthusiasm that belongs onstage. โBut it was too much magic to channel, and I was still small. My body demanded the Dreamless Sleepโฆโ
By the time she brings the irids to the present day without mentioning how weโre trying to cure Xaden, several hours later, theyโve all stopped asking questions. In fact, they lie in eerie silence as she finishes.
โThatโs why weโre here,โ she says. โTo ask if youโll come home to fight with us. To see if the knowledge was passed down of how the venin were defeated during the Great War, or if you know how to cure them.โ Her tail flicks with expectation. โAnd Iโd like to know about my family.โ
The male in the center narrows his eyes on me. โAnd you allowed her to channel as a juvenile? You took her into a war?โ
My mouth opens, then shuts as guilt settles on my shoulders. Heโs not saying anything I havenโt questioned of myself.
โIt was my choice!โ Andarna shouts.
The female to the right sighs, blowing sand down the beach. โShow us your wing.โ
Andarna tenses for a moment, as if deciding, then flares her wings. The left one buckles, and she forces it to extend, but the gossamer webbing trembles under the effort. โIt doesnโt usually shake. Iโm just tired from flying.โ
The female glances away, the sun catching on her curved horns. โWeโve seen enough.โ
โI can fly!โ Andarna snaps her wings shut. โIโm just missing a second set of muscles and canโt carry Violet. The elders said it has something to do with the delicate balance of wind resistance and tension on my wing, and her weight on the spinal discs that run under my seat. But thatโs all right because we have Tairn and he works with me every dayโand the elders, too. And when I get tired, he carries me, but only on long journeys.โ She glances down at her harness and shifts her weight nervously.
โPlease permit the effrontery of our need for a moment of privacy,โ the male in the center says.
Theyโre so rudelyโฆpolite.
Andarna sits, the iridsโ voices slipping out of my head.
The six of them walk into the water, their scales changing to colors only a shade darker than the ocean.
โI think weโre blocked,โ Ridoc signs.
โI think so, too,โ I reply.
Andarnaโs head angles toward us, and I offer what I really hope is a reassuring smile.
A moment later, three of the irids launch straight from the water, then disappear into the sky.
โThatโs not good,โ I sign.
โMaybe theyโre just going to get the others,โ Ridoc signs slowly.
The three left are the quiet male with the horns similar to Andarnaโs, the one from the center, and the female from the right. They walk toward us, their scales changing back to shades of pale blue as they emerge from the water.
My chest constricts. They could have the answer to everythingโฆor they could be as clueless about our history as we are.
โDid I pass the test?โ Andarna asks.
The slide-whistle sound plays again, and I wince as it screeches so high Iโm sure my ear is going to bleed.
โTest?โ the male in the center asks, peering down at Andarna.
โYou were just testing me, right? To make sure Iโm fit to visit our den? Where is it, anyway?โ The hope in her voice would cut my knees out if I were standing.
โYou were never the one being tested.โ The female sighs and looks over at me. The hair rises on the back of my neck. โYou were.โ
My head rears back and my stomach drops clean out of my body. โIโm sorry?โ
โYou should be.โ The female flexes her claws in the sand. โYou failed.โ
Tairn growls, and this time Andarna doesnโt stop him.
โViolet has never failed me,โ Andarna argues, thumping her tail against the ground.
I slowly rise to my feet. โI donโt understand.โ
The trio blatantly ignores me. โThe fact that you defend her actions is a testament to their failure as a society,โ the male says to Andarna.
Ridoc stands and folds his arms beside me.
โViolet loves me!โ Andarna shouts, her head swiveling between the three of them.
โShe uses you.โ The femaleโs eyes fill with sadness, and the scales of her brow scrunch. โShe took advantage of a vulnerable child. She used your power as an instrument of warfare, forced your premature growthโand look what you have become.โ
I fight to swallow past the rock that suddenly fills my throat.
โYou think Iโm broken,โ Andarna hisses.
โWe think youโre a weapon,โ the male responds.
My lips part, and a rumble works its way through Tairnโs chest.
โThank you.โ Andarnaโs scales flicker to mirror theirs.
โIt wasnโt a compliment.โ His words sharpen. โOur breed is born for peace, not violence like others.โ He spares Tairn a single glance before returning to Andarna. โYou were left behind as the criterion. The measurement of their growth, their ability to choose tranquility and harmony with all living things. Weโd hoped you would return to tell us the humans had evolved, that they had blossomed under the wardstones and no longer used magic as a weapon, but instead you have shown us the opposite.โ
I wrap my arms around my waist as he slices herโusโto the quick.
โAnd dragonkind has not learned their lesson, either. While youโโthe male in the centerโs gaze jumps to Aotromโโgifted your human with iceโโhe dares to shift his focus to Tairnโโyou armed yours with lightning.โ
โThatโs not how signets work,โ Ridoc argues.
โAnd youโโthe male lowers his gaze to Andarnaโโour very hope, have handed this human something far more dangerous to wield, havenโt you?โ
				




