Read Kindling Ashes: Firesouls Book I Online
Authors: Laura Harris
“Giselle?”
She opened her eyes. It was the fifth day of travelling in the mountains and the first time anyone had disturbed her in the evenings. Henry stood over her, his eyes wide and anxious.
“Can I talk to you?”
She bent her head once and he dropped to sit cross–legged. He was pale, his dark blonde hair matted and straggling around his face. She’d never had a real conversation with Henry before
but everyone knew him. He was the cheerful one, the person who kept everyone’s spirits up. Now it looked like a struggle for him to smile at her.
“What happened to Garth?” he whispered. “Gerard and Sarra won’t tell me, but Maria said you were there too.”
The memory of the old man going up in flames sent a shudder through Giselle. She wasn’t as ill as he had been yet, but the heat Baltair sent her at nights now made her uneasy.
She glanced over at the others. Both leaders were talking with some of the Firesouls who’d grown up in the mountains, not paying any attention to them. But why shouldn’t she tell Henry? He deserved to know. He’d been coughing too.
“He burnt.”
“What?”
Giselle frowned as the gruesome memory was brought to the forefront of her mind. “He was sweating all over, too hot, and then he just… went up in flames. His body was burnt away.”
Henry’s expression turned panicked. “
He went up in flames?
”
One of the other Firesouls glanced over and she motioned at him to be quiet. Maybe this was why he hadn’t been told.
“But… Giselle… I… what if that happens to me? I… I can’t breathe properly, I’m too hot all the time, sometimes everything turns black and I can’t see–”
“Hey, calm down,” she whispered, catching his arm that gestured wildly. He bit the corner of his lip and stared at her, waiting for reassurance. She thought quickly. “Garth looked way worse than you do before that happened, he couldn’t walk remember? You look great compared to that.”
“Well that’s ‘cause I’ve been trying to hide it, no cart here to carry anyone. And I thought it’d bring people’s spirits down if they saw, especially after everything that happened with
Corran
–” He spat out the name, scowling. “I told everyone we could trust him! At the start, I said it wasn’t his fault he was grumpy and didn’t do anything, I told people how his girl’s father had taken her away and he was sad about that. So when you said he was a Dunslade everyone stood up for him and I did too, I… I didn’t think he was like them.”
Why had Henry come to her? She was no good at reassuring
people,
she’d never had to before!
/Just say what you think is best
./
Why don’t you help?
She felt his reluctance and guilt.
/I won’t be able to soon
./
“Corran fooled everyone, Gerard and Sarra too. It’s not your fault,” she whispered, beating away the sadness that came with Baltair’s words. It sounded terrible even to her – she’d never trusted him, not with Baltair’s memories of his father in her head – but Henry nodded.
“Are we close to the eggs?”
She shrugged. “I don’t know. I hope so.”
/Giselle
!/
“What? What do you mean you don’t know? You’re taking us there!”
Heads turned their way and Giselle froze.
“You don’t know where we’re going?” someone asked.
“How can she not know? She’s got Baltair!”
“I thought that was why she got the uniform early!”
“No, I do know mostly,”
Giselle
said, but the hubbub would not settle. Questions and demands flew around her until Sarra jumped up.
“Quiet!”
Astonishingly it worked. Sarra frowned down at the Firesouls but it was with uncertainty. She glanced over but Giselle shrank back against the tree.
/Just tell them
./
They won’t listen to me!
/They will. Henry did
./
She shook her head.
With a sigh, Sarra looked away from her and spoke to the rest of the group. “Baltair’s memories were damaged when his soul left his body.” She spoke in a calm tone, but gasps circulated the group. “They have been coming back as Baltair finds familiar places and at every turning so far he has been able to direct us. We might not know how long this journey is going to take, but we trust Baltair. He will find the eggs.”
Murmurs of uncertainty then agreement rolled through the Firesouls. Sarra sat back down, and talk began again.
“It’ll be okay. You’ll find them,” Henry murmured with an attempt at his old cheery smile.
He kept watching her and she huddled deeper into her cloak, not replying. She could not decide if she wanted this trip over as soon as possible or if she would rather Baltair’s memories never found the eggs.
*
We can’t let them know we’re lost!
/We’re not lost, we’re just… we’re not lost
!/
She bit her tongue hard to stop herself retorting, fighting away his anger. She could feel the fear beneath it and that
overtook, sending her heart racing. Just yesterday she’d been thinking of how it wouldn’t be so bad if they couldn’t find the eggs because then she’d have longer before Baltair left – but what if they
really
couldn’t find them?
The sickness would take over
,
all the Firesouls would die
. There’d be no more dragons. Corran and the other Dunslades would win.
“Where to?” Sarra asked.
One path rose higher into the mountains, narrowing before winding around a corner out of sight. The other dropped down into a valley with a river running through it, littered with pine trees. Neither prompted any memories.
“…Giselle?”
“We’re thinking!” Giselle snapped. She stared at the valley then up the side of the mountain, willing images of Baltair’s past life to wash over them both. He growled in frustration as Giselle heard other Firesouls stop behind them.
“What is it?”
“Can’t she remember?”
Their whispers engulfed her and she strode forward, down the path into the valley. She heard Sarra sigh in relief as everyone followed.
/Is this a good idea
?/
All the other memories have come straight away, haven’t they? If we just keep walking we might find something you recognise.
Baltair didn’t agree. He didn’t object either.
They descended rapidly and the old mountain path faded into a field dotted with trees. It was a relief to walk on soft grass rather than rock and loose stones but the worry that Baltair wouldn’t recognise anything didn’t allow her to enjoy it for
long. She stared in every direction as they walked through the valley, hoping the others wouldn’t realise what she was doing.
Do you remember flying over a river?
/There’s rivers everywhere in these mountains
!/
Don’t yell!
A distracted apology was sent her way at the same time as Henry bounded up next to her, back to his normal grinning self.
“Isn’t this place great?”
“This… valley?” Giselle didn’t understand how Henry was so boundlessly optimistic.
“Yeah! It’s–”
His words broke off, transforming into vicious coughs that had him hanging onto her arm for support. She did her best to keep him up but he was tall and much heavier. They were both on their knees by the time the coughing fit released him. His shoulders trembled as he stared down at bloody hands before he wiped them on the grass.
“Shh,” he pleaded with her, a second before Gerard dropped down next to them.
“Are you okay?” he asked, eyes darting between both of them.
“Yeah, I just tripped and knocked Giselle over,” Henry said with a weak smile. Blood tainted his lips and when he tried to stand his legs collapsed under him.
“Hey now careful, stay lying down. It’s okay, we’ll take a break,” Gerard said, pressing a gentle hand to his shoulder.
Henry sighed but didn’t try and move again. His eyes turned back to Giselle, still trying to smile.
“Does Baltair remember flying around here when he was a hatchling?”
“What?”
/A hatchling?
Here
?/
“My dragon Aoife looked after all of them. It’s amazing.
All those tiny dragons, learning to fly.
They fell in the river and screamed about it but Aoife just told them to try again and keep trying.”
His smile was more genuine now and as Giselle gazed around the valley again, a flash of memory came back.
A wing hitting the branch of a tree and tumbling down onto the grass.
/Every hatching born nearby came here to learn to fly
,/
Baltair said with wonder.
/I… I know where we are. I think I know where to go. Get up! Try and find somewhere to see the end of the river
!/
“I’ll be back,” she said, rising to her feet and rushing towards one of the trees. She felt bad leaving Henry like that but what if this slipped away from Baltair? She jumped, catching a branch of a tall tree and hauling herself up onto it. The rough bark and branches worked as handholds just as well as bricks and wooden rafters did. Sarra called up to ask what she was doing but she didn’t bother to reply.
When the branches got too spindly to support her weight she paused, leaning to one side and peering through the needles. The river wound its way through the valley and out through a small gap behind another mountain.
/That’s it. That’s the way we need to go
!/
You remember?
Normally she saw when the new memories came back.
/Not passing through here with the eggs. But I would have had to go straight north, following the river. It’s the only way humans would be able to get through to get the eggs back. The other path is a dead
end,
it’s used by goats. And it can’t be too far – much further in the mountains it’s impassable
./
She glimpsed a golden dragon dropping a goat in front of her and dived in to feast.
Giselle slid down the tree and hurried back over to where Henry was now sitting up, looking less like he might throw up at any moment but still with an uncanny similarity to Garth’s pallor while they’d been travelling. The other Firesouls were scattered about nearby. She knelt down next to Henry and squeezed his shoulder.
“Thanks.”
“You’re… welcome?” he mumbled, looking dazed.
She shrugged with a grin, turning to stare off towards the edge of the valley. The eggs were near.
The smile dropped off her face. Soon it would be time to say goodbye.
Droighair was small in comparison to Dunslade Town, but it looked huge compared to every other place Corran had visited recently. A picket fence wrapped around the mix of stone and wooden buildings, but the few guards he could see were leaning back against it and chatting. The gates were wide open and no one challenged those who entered or exited.
He nudged the donkey’s ribs, yanking on the other side of the rope–reins to make sure it went in the right direction, and left the forest to join the road. Merchants with long carts carrying pine wood passed in the opposite direction, and although he got a few glances no one paid attention to him. He was just another traveller, albeit a dirty blood–stained one.
He entered the gates and paused to consider what to do next. Tilda’s father was a tutor, so he would be near wherever the local lord lived. He leaned down to tap on the shoulder of a woman and
ask
where the Lord of Droighair was. Despite her doubtful glance up and down him, she directed him further into the town.