were forever trying to kill each other, and they’d been in his tent earlier.
“Your vampire’s been given something very potent,” Morgana observed. “On a scale from one to five—five being the rare toxin that could actually kill an immortal—I’d put him at four.”
“
“Hope he can rebound from such a strong dose.”
In an obvious bid to do just that, he shook his head again. He nearly reeled before he regained his balance. He seemed confused, his feet sluggish in the thick mud.
She turned to Cas. He was seething, his horns ramrod straight, his fangs swollen. He unsheathed his sword, gripping it tightly, his arm muscles bulging. His friends in the stands yelled, antagonizing him even more.
Daciano ran his sleeve over his eyes, then again, as if his sight had been dimmed. When he drew his own weapon, he staggered once more.
The gate clanged shut for the last time. Before Bettina could say a word, Raum gave his signal. And she was helpless yet again as the horn sounded its final blare—
Cas attacked immediately, his sword flashing out. Daciano could barely deflect the hit in time. Their swords clanged loudly, the metallic pitch ringing out in the night.
Cas struck again; Daciano managed a lethargic block. The vampire’s reflexes were deteriorating even more, while Cas was faster, stronger, than she could have imagined—
With a sudden lunge, Cas thrust his sword straight out, like an extension of his brawny arm. Too late, Daciano reared his head back; the blade tip caught his cheek, flaying the skin open.
At that moment, moonlight hit the vampire’s face, illuminating ghostly white bone before blood welled.
Daciano evinced no expression—no pain, anger, confusion—just vacantness as blood flowed down his face.
Cas followed that parry with another lightning fast strike; a deep laceration appeared on the vampire’s sword arm.
As Bettina gaped at this turn of events, Morgana calmly observed, “Only a matter of time now, freakling.”
“No, no, the vampire will shake this off!” she said, feigning confidence she didn’t feel. Daciano looked like he could barely control his heavy eyelids—much less what was happening in the ring. “Y-you know how strong he is.”
With a mindblowing ferocity, Cas swung his sword high, using both hands to deliver a brutal strike; Daciano lifted his sword overhead to defend.
Again their blades clanged, metal scraping metal. Sparks rained down over Daciano’s head, highlighting his sweating, bloody countenance.
Pressing his advantage, Cas whaled hit after hit, as if swinging an ax at a chopping block.
The spate of furious blows drove Daciano down . . . down. . . .
When the vampire’s knees sank into the mire and confusion registered on his proud face, Bettina realized two things.
She was in love with him.
And she’d do anything to save him.
“Know defeat, vampire! Delivered unto you—by a demon!”
His disordered mind finally accepted the truth: he’d been . . . poisoned. Likely by the coward who was even now striving to take his head.
But how could Caspion have dosed him before the round? Trehan had only been around his cousins and Bettina.
The hits . . . ceased? Like a blur, the demon began tracing around him, cleverly keeping to his blind spots. Trehan struggled to rise. For her, he would fight on.
Suddenly, steel pressed against his throat. From behind, Caspion had him dead to rights.
At last, adrenaline began spiking throughout Trehan’s veins to burn away the toxin. Power flowed into his muscles, his body rebounding with the strength of the Daci.
“I plead mercy!” Bettina cried.
What?
Trehan’s breath left him. She’d just invoked the clause . . .
After the night they’d shared? After all he’d sacrificed?
Caspion leaned down to sneer, “I didn’t forget what you are. You’re a loser,
Now she would be this demon’s?
Caspion laughed. “Go back to your lonely home in the ground, old man.”
Were they in league together—
Realization struck him like a mace to the throat. Bettina had handed him a goblet of blood less than half an hour ago.
Not Bettina. It couldn’t be her.
The ambrosia she’d denied him last night.
His fangs shot longer, gone sharp as razors. All the aggression Trehan had vigilantly harnessed over ages came howling to life inside him—a ravening beast rising for carnage.
With a bellow, he gripped the end of Caspion’s sword. The blade sliced his hand, blood gushing as he snatched it away from the stunned demon. Tracing to his feet, Trehan hurled the weapon to the far edge of the ring.
As the demon gawked, Trehan sheathed his own sword, wanting to deal this death personally.
Even as the toxin was seared away, his thoughts grew even more jumbled, a tangled snarl in his mind.
He threw back his head and roared, fists clenched until his arm and chest muscles knotted. As the sound died in his throat, he gazed at Bettina, at her pale face.
When he turned to face his prey, a bloodred haze covered Trehan’s vision.
For the first time in his long, wearying existence, he fully gave himself over to rage.