forcefully even the ocean's waves undulated. 'No. Please, no. I didn't pit them against each other. I didn't. And I tried to kill the king. I did, but he—' Nola disappeared, her words gone with her.
'Return her. Now.' Delilah stood and strolled forward, the casual movement at odds with her words, as if she was doing what she knew she should but couldn't bring herself to care about the action.
Layel latched on to her ankles and jerked. She hit the sand face-first and came up sputtering. Though still in pain, he pushed to his feet and moved in front of her. The few creatures left standing were pallid, quiet. He wanted to tell Delilah there would be time to save their friends later, but kept silent, unwilling to incite even more divine punishment.
Hestia dusted off her hands, a job well done.
'You.' Ares pointed to the female nymph. 'You appear weak.'
Gulping, she took a trembling step backward. 'Me?'
She appeared strong to Layel, healthy, her color good. He frowned.
'You're being eliminated, as well. There is no place for weaklings here. However, I have decided to be lenient and restore your strength to full capacity. That is why you will wait in my heavenly chambers. I will join you shortly.'
Her fear turned to eagerness as she realized what he wanted from her, and she vanished with an excited gasp. Now Layel understood, as well. The war god wanted the nymph for his own.
Poseidon frowned. 'That wasn't fair. I wanted her.'
Ares shrugged, unconcerned. 'He who hesitates does not deserve such beauty. But do not worry. Who would know better than you, Poseidon, that there are plenty of other fish in the sea?'
The sea king glared, but didn't issue a rejoinder.
'Finally, the four strongest contenders remain,' Apollo said, rubbing his hands together. 'Delilah, the stubborn Amazon. Broderick, the loyal nymph. Layel, the fierce vampire king. Tagart, the determined dragon. Which of you will survive, though? Which of you will fall?'
'Soon you will face the greatest challenge yet, and only one can win.' Hestia splayed her arms wide. 'What will this winner receive, you ask? The answer is as simple, or as life-altering, as you want it to be. A boon. Anything you wish of us, we will do. Anything you desire shall be yours.'
'And what of the others?' Layel asked. 'What will happen to the losers?'
Rather than scold him for asking a question, Poseidon eyed him sharply. 'That, too, is a simple but life- altering answer. They will die.'
Die. The word echoed in his mind, an ominous threat that overshadowed the physical pain still beating through him. Gods. He was going to have to win this competition. His boon—sparing Delilah's life. Once he would have used such a favor to obliterate the dragons. No longer. Delilah came first.
'Before the prize can be awarded, the challenge must be met. Heed our words well, for things are not always what they seem. Each of you will travel up the mountain behind you,' Artemis said. 'There you will find something the likes of which even the bravest of men would run from. Something you fear above anything else. You are to face it, defeat it.'
There hadn't been a mountain on the island before, but Layel was willing to bet that if he turned, he would see one.
Poseidon grinned, a wicked edge to his amusement. 'But fear not, creatures of Atlantis. I'm returning all the weapons you crafted, for what better way to prove the true depth of your might than to utilize such instruments of death on your fellow opponents? Although…perhaps you have all you will need without them, hmm?'
Layel was suddenly weighed down with swords, daggers and lances. And then, one by one, the gods vanished.
'May the best warrior win,' whispered on the breeze in their wake.
His pain instantly ceased. Panting, sweating, he straightened, squared his shoulders and looked at Delilah. She was watching him. Unemotional. Unreadable. They stood there in silence for several seconds—an eternity.
'One of us will die,' she ventured, but she didn't sound as if she cared who lost their life.
It would not be her, he vowed. He would die himself before he allowed any harm to fall upon this woman. 'No.' He shook his head. 'One of us will win a prize. Anything we desire, even the life of the other.'
Her head tilted to the side, thoughts swimming in her eyes. 'Or the life of someone else. Your mate could live again.'
For one moment, he was overjoyed by the possibility. Susan…returned to him. He couldn't catch his breath, saw white lights behind his eyelids. Then, with a glance at Delilah, the joy shifted. Susan's return wasn't what he wanted anymore. It was time to let her rest in peace, as he'd realized at the waterfall. He wanted Delilah. She was his present, his future. 'I want you.'
She shrugged.
Tagart approached Delilah's side, eyes narrowed on Layel. 'Come,' he commanded the Amazon. 'We'll work the mountain together.'
All of Layel's possessive instincts surfaced with a roar. Mine! 'You will not touch her. You will not aid her. I will.'
Delilah, ever emotionless, shrugged off Tagart's hold. 'You have issued ultimatum after ultimatum, dragon. I was to follow you or risk death. Well, I am tired of following you. Our alliance ended when the teams were dissolved. I think you now want me to die. Anything to punish the vampire. So I'll work the mountain on my own. Besides, I'm an Amazon. I don't need a man.'
She turned and strode away from them, Layel's gaze tracking her every movement. She approached a—His eyes widened. There was a mountain, huge, towering, dark and surrounded by foreboding shadows. Even the bravest man would run from what's up there, the gods had said.
Tagart took advantage of Layel's distraction and attacked, claws raking Layel's chest. Rather than engage, Layel simply dematerialized. Only one thing mattered right now—and for once, it wasn't the dragon.
DELILAH FELT DEAD inside as she increased her speed, going from a stroll to a run in seconds. She dodged trees, their limbs slapping at her, jumped over thick roots and ignored the eerie animalistic purr that reverberated through the air. Soon she was panting, didn't know where she was or where she was going, and didn't care.
Her sister had been sent away to be mentally and emotionally tortured, and she hadn't been able to save her. Layel was toying with her for some reason, offering her everything she'd once desired. I want you, he'd said. She still couldn't bring herself to care—not even if he'd meant every word.
I should care. But in the void that was her heart, there were no regrets. No happiness, no concerns.
'Delilah.'
One second she was running, the next she was soaring through the air. She struggled until she drew in the scent of man, strength and blood. His arsenal of weapons pressed into every point of contact, abrading her skin.
'Put me down,' she said flatly.
'Hold on to me.' Layel's voice was strained. Sweat beaded every inch of his face, and lines of fatigue etched his eyes and mouth. Never had he appeared more exhausted.
'Put me down.' There was a spark of awareness inside her, arousal about to bloom, but it was quickly snuffed out as if it had never been. What was wrong with her?
'I hurt you,' he said into her ear. 'I am sorry for that, so very sorry.'
'As sorry as you are about your mate's death?' she found herself asking. She didn't care about his answer, but something compelled her to ask, anyway.
'Yes,' he replied without hesitation.
'There's no reason to lie. You're nothing to me now. I was merely curious.'
Pain glowed in his eyes, deepening the blue to a sorrowful black. 'I want to be everything to you.'
A few hours ago, she would have rejoiced. Now…'I told you, I no longer want you.' Truth. There was nothing inside her to give him. Or anyone, for that matter.
'I want you. You are all that I desire, and instead of cherishing you as you deserve, I was cruel. I beg your forgiveness for that, and will do anything to get it.' When she said nothing, he added, 'I hate that I hurt you, that you now look at me as if I'm invisible.'
Wind ruffled her hair across her face as she studied his features. She saw what she'd wanted to see all these many days: tenderness, kindness and caring. She saw…love? In that moment, she did regret the numbness.