Yami.
People scream in the streets. They run for cover.
And the dragon descends, breathing flame upon all in his path. He sets buildings on fire. And when I look behind me, I see it.
The grove.
Burning.
How could I have done this? How can I stop it?
"Yami!" I call out to the sky. "Yami, stop. Please. It’s me."
The dragon tilts his head down at my form, and then he strikes. I dodge out of the way.
But Es isn’t fast enough.
Talons graze her shoulder, and she screams in pain and falls to the stone tiles. Pete rushes to her side, blocking her with his body.
Tears fill my eyes. "Yami. This isn’t you."
A gust of wind nearly knocks me down.
And the dragon lands before me. His purple eyes stare deep into my soul. Within them I see time and space and the end of all things. Within them I see death.
What have I done?
What have I unleashed?
Yami…
He lunges for me. To kill. To end.
And then a silver owl crashes into his side, ramming them both into a building. The stone crumbles around them, and the beasts roar and hiss as they fight each other with tooth and claw.
Varis glides down in front of me, his cloak twirling in an unnatural wind.
I nearly pass out from relief and fear and complete anguish. "Varis, I'm so sorry."
He doesn't look at me as he replies. "This is not the time. Focus. You and you alone can calm the Midnight Star and push back the Darkness. Close your eyes."
I feel gutted at his anger and disappointment, and my own failure to abide by his guidance, but I close my eyes and focus as he speaks. He takes me through exercises to calm my heart rate, to ease tension, to manifest the light in my soul and dispel the Darkness.
I can hear his owl, Zyra, fighting with Yami, struggling to pin him down and keep him from causing more harm. I can hear the screams of men and women as they try to put out fires and free others from rubble. I feel a wave of grief at what I've done, but I push it away and concentrate.
I push away the anger and fear and sorrow. I push away the thrill I sought after. I push until there is nothing left. But calm. But peace.
When I open my eyes, my little baby dragon is with me again, perching on my shoulder. And then I feel exhaustion overtake me, and I collapse. I look up, to the burning grove, to the ancient trees who groan as they die, and I weep. "I’m so sorry. I didn’t know. I didn’t know…"
Varis doesn’t look at me. "I told you not to summon the Darkness. Now, you must live with the consequences." He turns and walks away, leaving me alone with shadow and flame.
Chapter 11
SILVER FLAME
Kayla Windhelm
"We cannot let our enemies live."
—Lord Salzar
We return to the Outlands and mount Tavian’s horse once more. "Metsi is even more mad than I heard," he says, half to himself.
I frown. "And you thought going to her was a good idea?"
"She wasn’t always so. Once she was kind and wise and good. Seeing her people slaughtered must have changed her."
"What happened back there, when the room grew dark?"
He sighs. "You know of the four elements, yes? Riku, Wadu, Zyra, and Tauren. Most Fae tap into their power to cast spells. But there is another power. That of Darkness. That of the Midnight Star. It is life. It is death. It is the beginning and the end."
"Is that the power you use?"
He looks away, something lurking in his eyes. Shame, perhaps. "Long ago, before the Unraveling, I was a scholar of sorts. I studied at a library so great, there are none that even compare now. My colleagues and I developed a theory, a theory that the power of the Midnight Star can be accessed by others. Not only the chosen High Fae.
"It took years of research and experimentation, but finally we created a ritual. We spoke the incantations under a full moon, covered in the colors of night. And we saw it… the Darkness. But we could not control it. The power spread like a plague, killing all it touched. All but those who had called it forth.
"When I realized what was happening. I ran. I ran back home. To my family. My wife. And when I reached them. I saw their rotting bodies, covered in blackened flesh. I still remember my wife, reaching for me, pleading for me to save her. But I could do nothing."
He goes silent, and I can tell he will say no more.
"I’m sorry," I say, wrapping my arms around him in a hug.
"It was a long time ago," he says.
And then, we ride in silence.
I look to the fresh sky and watch the rising sun. The climate here, even the time of day, is so different from Avakiri. I try to lighten the mood. "So, since you decided not to sell me to the crazy Wild One, what next?"
He doesn’t face me. Just looks at the snow, lost in thought. "Don’t know. But there’s a storm coming. We need shelter." I wonder how he knows. I see no signs. "We’ll be there soon."