Burning Bridges (13 page)

Read Burning Bridges Online

Authors: Nadege Richards

Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Fiction

I dismissed all doubts that came to me when I reached out and held her in my arms. She was so small, and being in the
seventh
form, I didn

t know the first thing about girls. I guess, in some way, pain was pain. I

d had enough of it by then
to know
when a broken heart matched my own.

Your mother was amazing, Feven. I

m sorry she

s gone.

She tried to push me away, but the tighter I held, the more the challenge left her. She fell limp in my arms and convulsed with tears. She whispered,

Do you know what it

s like to have no one, Ayden?
It

s worse than loneliness…it

s
the
death
of you
.

She fell to the ground and
I
fell with her, locking my arms around her.

No, I don

t. But at some
point
I will.

Feven looked up at me.

That day, I wasn

t sure what it was,
but
I

d found someone else who was as broken a
s me, maybe even more so. T
he two of us had sat quietly for the rest of the evening, staring out at the open bay and blue skies
while
I listened to Feven murmur a pr
ayer for her mother

s ascension.
I had
no tears to shed or
a prayer
for
the deceased.

I

m so lost.

G
lancing up at the moon
through my small window
, I realized that

s exactly what
this
was.

We
were
broken. We
were
lost.

There was
no hope for the hopeless.

 

 

 

 

 

T E N

Echo

 

S
hadow was late and
Mother had already forced me through two plays of music, each of which I didn

t even know the composer.


Again,

she barked. I sat up straight and poised my fingers over the keys of the piano. My fingers were red from all the playing, but I continued.

Sing.

I opened my mouth to belt out the chords
and the words slipped from my lips in fluent New-Latin, a language well spoken in Thediby.

Mother showed no signs of stress when I looked at her from above the piano top. Not that I liked seeing her so mad and crazy, but every few minutes I found myself anticipating the moment she

d break down again. Remotely, I wondered if she was sick. It wasn

t a good thought, but it was better than thinking your mother had two personas.


I can

t hear you,

she yelled.

I rolled my eyes and sang louder.

Follow me to the garden of Eden / where the willows bloom and meadows sing— / Run with me as we take the sky / and flee the sorrow that tomorrow will bring


I

d known this song as if I

d been born with it. It was an old nursery rhyme Mother was so adamant on me learning. I

d played it enough to know I would never, even in a million years, forget it.

My words were cut off by Shadow

s footsteps on the parquet. Mother looked at her angrily when she asked to take me into town. She complied anyway and I left with Shadow.

I smiled discreetly.


What took you so long? She was killing me in there,

I said as we passed the guards outside the door and sauntered down the huge lawn of the
palace
.

Shadow rolled her eyes and dismissed me.

Does it matter? I

m here now. And I heard you in there; it seemed to me like you needed the practice.

I gasped and nudged her shoulder with my own.

You know I

m not the piano-playing type.

I skipped in front of her
, walking backwards and doing my best not to trip over my feet.

Besides, I

m going to be a Tigress like you and Ezily.

At the sound of those words, they just felt right.


Let

s not far-fetch this, okay?

Shadow sneered.

I just want you to know how to protect yourself, just in case.

I froze.

Just in case what, Shadow?


Nothing.

She waved it off and continued to walk. We were outside the
palace
compounds now, walking along the dusty roads to the market gates.

It

s nothing. Anyway, you

re getting married, you

ll be Queen soon, and no one will be able to hurt you.
You won

t need to be a Tigress.

I stopped and allowed Shadow to walk ahead. It wasn

t the fact that she

d pushed my temper with the marriage
talk
or even being Queen. It was that last bit that I would have missed had I not been listening intently. Shad
ow had never lied to me, nor had
she ever had reason to. Was she implying that
I wasn

t
good enough
? Or was this just her ensuring our family

s title? She was another mystery to me, as well was everyone lately. For the first time, I questioned the stability of my family.

Ezily waited by the same tree she did
everyday when we met her for practice
. This time there was no target on the tree, but a sword in Ezily

s hand that made her look more of a Tigress than she

d ever been.

I see you

ve dressed for the occasion,

she said, swinging the sword around in her hand, gracefully slicing the air.

I shrugged and smoothed down the front of the leather corset Shadow let me borrow. The pants were mine, the only thing I owned that wasn

t a dress. My hair was pulled into a tight ponytail that hung well past my shoulders.

Dress to impress, right?

Ezily smiled.

That

s what I like to hear.

She sheathed the sword and whispered something to Shadow. Shadow nodded and I watched her take her place further down the park, somewhat hidden behind the big tree.

Shadow

s your target.

Ezily quickly untied her sheathed sword from her waist and threw it to me.

I want to see what you can do under pressure.

I barely caught the sword.

Are you kidding me? That

s li
ke putting me in a den of lions—
I don

t know anything yet!

Ezily laughed.

You

re smart, so do something.

She looked back at Shadow who had dropped into a
low stance,
and cocked her head towards me.

Don

t worry,

Ezily whispered.

She

s your sister, so by law
she can

t kill you. Purposely, anyway.

And that makes me feel so much better.

I unsheathed the heavy, adorned sword and tried my best to hold it above my head, or was it supposed to be behind me like a swinging bat? Ezily laughed at me and I sulked.

You

re cruel,

I told her.


We

ll see who

s cruel.

She waved over to Shadow and I braced myself for impact as she charged for me. Something had told me, probably years ago, that I was born to be a fighter. Maybe it was seeing my sister take out that boar or living the monotonous life I knew I couldn

t carry on much longer. I was a fighter, but I just didn

t know what to fight for.

As Shadow grew nearer, I found what I wanted to fight for and I reached for it. Freedom—that is all I ever wanted. Shadow wasn

t my father, the one who was stripping me of that liberty, but for the moment she was. I released the pent up anger of being shut down and allowed it to swallow me whole. Revenge—it was something I had never craved for until now. Temptation, rebellion, and love—my only allies in a disastrous war against myself.


Don

t just stand there, move!

Ezily barked, and almost immediately, I reacted. When Shadow was at most a foot away from me, she swung down with her sword in earnest mean
s
to harm me.
Or scare, in which she had done
successfully. But my reaction time was fast and I quickly ducked out of the way, turning so that I was standing behind her.

Shadow laughed and said,

Not bad. For a rookie.

She swung again, but this time she was deft and unpredictable. There was no time to
counter
, so I ducked again, meeting the edge of Shadow

s sword face to face.

Always look where you are
turning;
never take your eyes from your enemy

s weapon. Do so—

Shadow lifted the edge of her sword to my neck and shook her head,

—and you die.


Again!

Ezily shouted.

Concentrate, Echo.

I am
, I thought. With a sigh, I held my sword up to Shadow

s. Ezily counted to three and gave us the thumbs up to go. I

d always known Shadow was strong, but when she pushed
forward
with her sword and charged for me again, I seriously thought she was going to kill me.
Too many
times
to count
a m
atch had ended with her sword to
my neck or me face-
planted in
the
hard,
packed
dirt while she
pressed down on my back with a heavy foot
. By the end of the day, I was tired and frustrated.


Don

t worry, you

ll get it. Shadow

s had years of practice, remember?
She wasn

t always great, nor was
anybody.

Ezily draped an arm around my shoulder and smiled.

I stared at her.

It

s not that. I just expected more out of myself. Maybe I need to give it another shot?

Shadow came around from behind us and shook her head at me.

Don

t stress yourself out, Echo. We can try it again tomorrow.

When I sighed, she continued.

You were doing it all wrong, you know? I saw the look in your eyes.


What look?

I moved away from the two of them to sheath the sword. I handed it back to Ezily with a frown.


One of vengeance and anger,

Shadow answered.

You thought it could fuel you, but you were wrong.


No, I—


You can

t go on adrenaline alone,

Ezily cut in.

It will only carry you so far. When the rush is over, and you can

t face the reality of war
singlehandedly
, you

ve succumbed to the worst defeat. Yourself.

I shook my head.

I don

t get it.

Sighing, Shadow unsheathed her sword and began twirling it around in the air, talking to me but not at me.

Greatness lies somewhere between defeat and victory
—only there
, in fact

as a mind cannot work without a body. Anger blinds you and keeps you focused on one thing: killing the person who hurt you. But keep in mind that the other has the same goal, and when two similar fronts collide, there

s hell to pay.

Where had I heard that before?

She stopped, pointing the gold
-
hilte
d sword at me.

You have to be smarter, wiser, and focused. There is no defeat in war, there is only victory.


But—


The only war worth fighting for is the war against
you
rself
. Ju
st so happens that in every war
there
are
reasons
why you are fighting so hard,
the main one being your own salvation.
Remember that.

Ezily patted my back
and
then went to Shadow, playfully punching her in the arm as she walked back towards the tree.

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