face us?”
“Don’t make me hurt you, child.”
Icily, Sahara said, “Will you face us, or will you yield?”
In the blink of an eye, the ancient tiger shifted just enough to turn hands to claws and lashed out at Jason. The vampire jumped back with a hiss of pain as his blood splashed across several bystanders.
Alysia took a step forward, but Jeht grabbed her arm. The elder Mistari boy was determined that the laws of his kind be followed.
Meanwhile, Sahara pounced at Kral, her full tiger form causing his human shape to stumble back several steps before he, too, changed, twisting as he fell, until the two tigers separated, both bleeding, with snarls of rage and pain.
“This is insane,” Alysia whispered.
“But entertaining,” another familiar voice responded.
Sarta. Christian hadn’t seen the leader of all three Bruja guilds much since she had taken over the position —unlike Crystalle, Sarta did not believe in micromanagement—but now she seemed to appear out of nowhere, perfectly on time for an unscheduled leadership challenge. “Kevin called me, on Sahara’s orders,” she explained. “She was right. I do want to see this.”
It was worth watching. For SingleEarth mediators sworn to nonviolence, Sahara and
Jason fought with a synchronized savagery that could only be described as awesome.
CHAPTER 24
ALYSIA WINCED AS Jason landed a blow on Kral’s lower back. With vampiric strength behind it, the double- sted hit had probably obliterated his kidney. Kral gave a cry of rage and pain and replied with a swipe that took out most of Jason’s face, sending him sprawling toward Alysia.
As Alysia instinctively moved toward Jason, she once again felt the viselike grip of the older tiger cub. Jeht looked up at her long enough to shake his head; then he turned his gaze back toward the ght. Sarik pounced, snarled, and darted, keeping Kral’s attention on her while Jason wiped blood from his eyes and healed enough to rejoin the fray. The tigers occasionally took their fully feline forms, but most of the time they fought with claws on human hands.
“We’re really going to stand here until they manage to beat each other to death?” Alysia whispered to Christian.
Kral was hundreds of years old; he had founded Onyx. Jason had been initiated to violence by Maya, one of the most vicious of the modern mercenaries. And Sahara had been born and raised in this world. They could all dish out pain like SPAM from a can, but they could also heal it.
There had to be
Anything. Kral was nearly double Sahara’s size in both human and tiger form. He wasn’t going to back down until they killed him.
She wrenched her arm out of the tiger cub’s grip. He shouted at her and jumped between her and the ght, pulling a knife from a sheath at his waist and holding it up as if to say
“Now, Alysia,” Christian said, with all his good-old-boy charm, “you know I’ll back your play if you make it, but I
“I never knew Sahara,” Alysia retorted, “and I—”
Sarik shouted, “Father!” All eyes returned to the ght in time to see Sarik dodge Kral’s next swipe of claws and then dance back, choosing not to retaliate. Instead, she demanded breathlessly, “Is this really what you want?”
Jason, ever observant, responded to her change in tactics. He moved back, putting himself out of Kral’s easy reach, and stopped pressing the attack.
Kral paused, using the time they were giving him to recover.
Both tigers were winded and ushed, and all three combatants were striped with injuries.
During the brief respite, Alysia saw Jason set his teeth and smooth broken ribs and a collarbone back in place; Kral had literally tried to tear his throat out. Kral meanwhile pressed a hand over a wound low on his stomach that was bleeding profusely and threatening to expose organs beneath. Why was Sahara letting him recover? So they could start this all again?
“I missed
No one answered, because Sarik started talking.
“You killed Cori,” she said, “because she wasn’t the child you wanted.” Despite her shortness of breath, despite wounds that Alysia could see beginning to knit themselves closed and blood staining the oor around them all, Sarik spoke in an even tone that forced those nearby to hush to listen. “You would kill me now because I am the child you tried to make me and I won’t let you rule me. I know that you intend to kill Jeht because you know he will ght you once he is older. Is that all you want with the rest of your life? You are getting older. Someday you will not be strong enough to hold Onyx. Do you really want to leave nothing behind?”
“It is better to leave nothing,” Kral retorted, “than to leave a legacy of weakness and—”
“Listen to yourself,” Sarik interrupted.
Sarik continued, watching her father warily, never releasing his gaze.
“Onyx is … It’s a portrait, one that’s fading and weakening while you pretend that you will last forever. If you destroy us all now, destroy everyone strong enough to stand against you—me, Jason, Alysia, Christian, Jeht, and even little Quean—you won’t be remembered as a powerful tiger who ruled Onyx for centuries. You’ll only be remembered by those who are mortal, those whose memories only go far enough to remember when Onyx was weak and run-down and you were seen as the fool who let it get that way and sat on its puppet throne in the last of its years. Or you can move on now and let your legacy stand as a legend. It is your choice.”
“I can’t do that.”
Kral had run Onyx for two hundred years. Did he even know
“Then …”
Sarik took a deep breath, and Alysia braced herself, prepared to join the ght. Instead, Sarik knelt and bowed her head, lifting her wrists up before her.
Jason followed her, taking the same posture, followed by the two tiger cubs.
“You can kill us all, or you can let us stand,” Sarik said.
“Kill us,” Sarik continued, “and you end your own blood. You end your line and any chance you have at progeny who will determine the course of this world. Or you can do the bravest thing you have ever done in your life: yield, and allow your children to be strong.”
She had a knife in her hand when Kral took a step back, then another, and another, each swifter than the last. Only when he was no more than a shadow against the back wall did he say, “Stand,