Page 53 of Echoes in Flame


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Zorinna reached his side, brushing her hand against his in quiet comfort. “The royal family must not be aware of these attacks. The Prince would have told me.”

“Would he have?” Jyuri raised a brow.

“Now is not the time for your stupid rivalry,” she hissed.

“A rivalry implies there is any competition at all, darling.” Jyuri narrowed his eyes. “Let there be no doubt—I will not let these acts of fanaticism go unanswered.”

He stepped past all of us, frozen in shock, waving his hand through the air. A cloud of frigid air flowed from his palm to the temple, dousing the flames at once. Crystals of ice formed on the broken pillars as the ground below grew thick with a hardening layer of snow. In the span of a breath, Jyuri had transformed the grim scene into something almost peaceful. Their suffering was over now.

“They aren’t recognizable, but their bodies are intact enough for burial.”

Kaelias moved to the front, signing, “I will do it. There was a cart back at the cabin. Let me take them to the undertaker, and then I will meet you at the temple.”

Lorian nodded.

Jyuri returned to our sides and Zorinna looked up at him, her chin wobbling with emotion she’d never let blatantly show. “Thank you, Jyuri.”

He did not give an answer, but his eyes stayed locked on hers until Lorian beckoned for us to continue.

We walked in silence through the outskirts of Val’Naeris, making our way to the south end. The images of those Elves seared into the back of my mind, swallowing any other thoughts. It was too vicious. Too familiar. The type of torturous murder the people from my village would have and had committed when anyone stepped out of line. They weren’t so different from the Divine Council. Two sides of the same corrupt coin, parading as something holy.

The memories had felt like a weight pressing down on my chest. Now, they felt like kindling.

Val’Naeris was nothing like it’d been just weeks ago when I’d visited with Luelle to acquire our dresses from Alessnae’s shop. The city streets were bustling with life in the late evening, but there was a clear shadow cast upon its people. Word of the attacks must have spread, regardless of the royal family’s attempts to thwart them. There was a feeling of unease. Most people were in groups, scanning the crowd for some hidden danger. A few shops had their windows boarded, while others were closed before the sun had fully set.

“The celebration of a full moon is usually much grander,” Zorinna explained, confirming my suspicions. “Most shops will stay open late, and locals will sell special drinks, pastries, and trinkets in the city center. There are often outside visitors, as well.”

“The people know,” Makatza said, fingering the pommel of her sword. “There is fear here.”

“Should we not encourage them to return to their homes?” I questioned. “They could be caught in the middle of our plan.”

Zorinna shook her head. “We can’t show our hand. If the Council takes the bait, Lorian, Jyuri, and I will focus our efforts on evacuating the innocents. Kaz and Makatza will serve as your guards. If Kaelias returns in time, he will join them.” She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. “And with any luck, Alandris, being the stubborn idiot he is, should be amongst your would-be attackers, planning to turn on them by himself. He will serve as an extra element of surprise, which should give us the upper hand. Should be quite the surprise for him, as well, seeing us there.”

I turned to Jyuri. “You’ve not heard from him since his last letter?”

“No.”

That made my stomach twist more than anything. If he’d done something to reveal himself as a traitor too soon.… No. I couldn’t allow myself to spiral down that baseless train of thought. I needed to focus on surviving and killing every last twisted monster who’d hurt those innocent worshipers. Needed to ensure that what they’d done could never happen again. They wanted to find me so badly? I would make them regret it.

By the time we’d reached the Temple of the Moon, the sun had fully set, giving way to a blackened sky blanketed with stars and a moon nearly at its apex. The temple itself was similar in structure to the one we’d passed coming in, though significantly grander. It towered into the sky, giant pillars holding up a dome ceiling decorated with multicolored stained glass. Vines crept over every piece of stone, staining the off-white a pale green. A holy structure deeply entwined with nature.

It was beautiful, but it would soon be our battleground.

Stepping between the pillars, keeping to the shadows, I spotted a priestess at the far end of the room. A silky lilac dressdraped over her, and swirls of white ink painted every bit of her visible skin. A sheer veil extended from the crown of flowers placed in her blond hair, covering her face from the onlookers seated in stone pews. She addressed the crowd in Elvish, as they listened in concentrated silence to her tale.

Upon darkness walled we this land

Lost, we lamented, thus we turned

Our eyes towards the moon above

And upon our grief she did answer

Spilling her light upon our shores

A drink she partook from the sun

Bestowed upon her children below