“There’s
“Listen. While you’re down there, don’t think about me. Don’t think about what I’m doing or whether I’m okay.”
She snapped her teeth at him. “You’ll be looking for the Paring Rod. How can I not—”
“
A stiff nod.
“Also, if you don’t defeat them, Kaia, I’m going to kill them far more cruelly than you would have. Defeat issued a challenge to protect you from other Harpies before I came here, but this one is all me.”
Her jaw dropped.
“There. Now you’re properly motivated to do what needs doing. So go kick some ass.”
Beside him, Sabin and Lysander shifted restlessly, bringing him back to the present. Zacharel hadn’t yet made an appearance.
“I hate this Gladiator shit,” Sabin muttered.
“Yes, well, where do you think the Romans learned this kind of behavior?” the angel asked.
Sabin sputtered for a minute. “You’re trying to tell me
“I must try only if you’re lacking intelligence.”
Sabin opened his mouth to snap a reply, but a trumpet blew, signaling the start of the third game, and the crowd quieted. A second later, several of the iron doors groaned and creaked as they were raised. The combatants spilled out, sprinting into the arena.
Strider straightened, focused. Several more iron doors opened. Lions, tigers and bears—oh, my—joined the race. All were agitated, their mouths foaming.
He searched…searched…there. A glimpse of that bright red hair, bound tight in a ponytail. Kaia wore scarlet, like the rest of her team. Unlike the others, she did not clutch a weapon. He frowned.
The women at last reached the middle of the grounds, and without pause, the match began in a tangle of teeth, claws and metal. Grunts and shrieks instantly abounded. Blood sprayed.
If she burned a fellow Harpy to death, she would hate herself afterward. Or worse, if she couldn’t summon the fire, they would kill her and he would hate them, punish them, destroy them as promised. For him, though, for the Rod, she’d decided to risk it. Damn her!
He’d thought he’d motivated her to victory. He’d merely incited her to craziness.
“What the hell is she doing bare-handed?” Sabin asked conversationally. “Even Gwen has a weapon.”
He didn’t answer, couldn’t. There was a knot in his throat, cutting off sound, air. The other teams turned on her, just as he’d expected. What he hadn’t—the animals charged her as if she wore a bull’s-eye and he could guess why. Someone had worked them into a frenzy using Kaia’s scent.
Which they’d most likely gotten from her stolen coat.
Strider was on his feet and shoving his way through the crowd in seconds. Until something hard slammed into his back, knocking him down. There wasn’t time to catch himself. His forehead hit rock, a sharp pain exploding through his head. Oxygen abandoned his lungs. His vision blurred.
Nothing stopped him from bucking off the weight and standing, running forward, not caring to look behind him to see who’d tried to stop him.
Through a haze, he zeroed in on Kaia. She was darting around the arena, throwing her competition at the frothing animals. The beasts were all too happy to tear into their new toys as they followed her.
The hard weight slammed into him a second time, tossing him back on the ground like a rag doll. Roaring, Strider swung around, intending to do a little killing before he resumed his journey.
“Your woman will be disqualified if you aid her.” Lazarus unfurled from him and stood. He was weaponless, shirtless, pants unfastened and clearly hastily tugged on. The dark chain tattooed around his neck was pulsing, slithering around his neck like a snake, the inky links actually clanking together.
Strider stood and took stock. “I’d rather she were disqualified than killed. Now, then. You and I have a bit of business to attend to before I go.”
Lazarus quirked a brow. “Good luck with that.”
Shocked, he peered down at himself. They had run through him as if he were no more substantial than mist.
“No one can see us,” Lazarus said easily. “Not even the angels.”
Red dotted his vision. “What did you do to me?”
Boos and hisses from the crowd had him swinging around and peering below. The combatants had thinned out somewhat, but most of Team Kaia still fought. Including Kaia herself.
She was coated with blood and he wasn’t sure if it came from her or the others, but her movements hadn’t slowed. She was still throwing punches, kicking and flinging females at the—no, not the animals. At Bianka, who finished them off with a long, curved blade. The animals were now fully fed and satisfied, sitting off to the side and watching the rest of the battle through slumberous eyes.
The panic inside him eased. Kaia hadn’t resorted to fire. Or maybe, as he’d supposed, she didn’t know how to summon it. But either way, she was kicking ass and taking names. Even better, the teams were no longer able to converge on her en masse. She moved through them too quickly.
“I only have a few moments,” Lazarus said, now at his side. “If Juliette notices I’m gone…”
Reminded of the challenge that had been accepted, Strider said, “I’m sorry, but I have to do this.” Lightning fast, he threw his own punch, knuckles crunching into the warrior’s nose. Cartilage snapped. Blood leaked from his nostrils.
Defeat sighed with satisfaction, pouring pleasure through his veins.
Lazarus straightened and wiped the crimson away with the back of his wrist. “I doubt I will be the first person to tell you how annoying you are.”
“You might be the thousandth.” He walked the rest of the way through the balcony, until he was poised over the edge. The warrior followed him, returning to his side. “So how are we here but not here?”
“Juliette has been forced to grant me more and more powers in order to see these games through as she wishes.”
“She can give you powers? Just like that?” He snapped his fingers.
A stiff nod.
“Like what?”
“The ability to cast illusions no being can penetrate.” Another nod, and their surroundings changed in an instant.
Strider blinked, one moment seeing the stands as they’d once been, the next seeing them as they were: crumbling, eroded by time and harsh elements. Not to mention the humans touring through the designated sections, snapping pictures. Then, after another blink, the stands were brand-new again.
“Plus the ability to hide our immortal world from the mortal one?” Strider asked.
“Yes. That, too.”
“And you’re sharing this with me because…”’ Cause yeah, Strider knew damn good and well this could be a trick. That the bastard could mean to lull him into a false sense of security before striking. Hell, as distracted as he was, Lazarus could attack him at any moment without much resistance.