Jamil couldn’t guard both sides at the same time. The knives in my boots were trapped under Gregory’s body. It was beautifully timed. I rolled over Gregory’s body, and felt the cloak rush over me, as talons slashed where I’d been. I went for the boot knife, but never had a chance. I saw the clawed hand coming for me. Everything slowed down, like images caught in crystal so that you see every detail. I seemed to have all the time in the world to draw the knife, or to try and dodge the slashing talons, yet a part of my brain was screaming that there was no time. I threw myself back onto the floor, felt the air rush over me as the snake man stumbled, so sure of its target that it hadn’t been prepared for me to move. The rest was instinct. I foot-swept the snake, and it was suddenly on its back. I got a knife in my right hand, but the snake was on its feet, kicking upward like it had springs in its spine.
I felt more than saw something large and dark leap through the air over me, landing behind me. My attention was diverted for a fraction of a second, but that was enough. The one in front darted in, a movement so fast my eyes couldn’t follow it. I put my left arm out, taking the blow, as my right tried to stab forward. My left arm went numb like it had been hit with a baseball bat. I could have stabbed into the stomach, but I caught movement out of the corner of my eye and threw myself on my side on the floor as the second claw swept over me. I slashed at the legs and opened a gash even through the boots. The snake screamed and limped away.
The second snake came for me, claws outstretched. I didn’t have time to get off the floor or anything else. I held the knife ready, my left arm only partially useable, and watched the thing fall on me like an iridescent nightmare. A smaller black blur hit it from the side, and they both crashed into the wall. It was Meng Die. The claws ripped into her pale flesh as I watched.
I didn’t have time to see more, because Coronus loomed up over me, blood dripping from his neck and shoulder, his shirt shredded. Sylvie was behind him, struggling with Marco, trying to get past him to follow Coronus. Her lovely hands had turned into claws, though the rest of her was still human. The really powerful shapeshifters could do that—partially change at will.
Jamil was in the far corner, fighting with two of the snake men. Gregory was flowing with fur, changing shape, helpless until he was finished. I didn’t have time to look at the other half of the room. Coronus was almost on me, and I was out of time. I did the only thing I could think of. I up-ended the knife and threw it at him. I didn’t wait to see if it would hit. I was already moving towards the nearest wall and the collection of blades. I had my hand on the hilt of a sword when Coronus slashed my back open. I fell to my knees screaming, but my right hand stayed on the sword, and I jerked it from the wall brackets as I fell. I turned, putting my left side to him. He sliced open my left shoulder, but it didn’t hurt like my back had. Either the wound was deeper, or I was losing the feeling in that arm. I used the seconds I had—the ones he used to cut me—and it didn’t hurt to turn the sword in my right hand and plunge it backwards, behind me without turning to see where he was. It was as if I could feel him behind me, as if I knew just where he stood. I felt the blade bite into flesh. I shoved upward, coming to my feet with the force of the blow, shoving the blade backwards, inwards, through him, as hard as I could. I had never done anything like that before, but the movement felt like old memory. And I knew it wasn’t my memory. It wasn’t my body that remembered how to turn the sword as I turned my body to do extra damage, scrambling internal organs as I drew the blade out, and raised it over the kneeling figure. I raised the sword one-handed. This I knew how to do. I’d been taking heads off of bodies for years. The blade was on its downward stroke when he screamed, “Enough!” I didn’t stop or even hesitate.
It was Jamil who launched himself into me, over the man’s bowed head. He pinned me to the wall, one hand on my wrist, while I fought him. “Anita, Anita!”
I looked up at him, and it was as if I was just realizing who he was, or what he was doing. I’d known, but only in theory, my body had been about to take the snake man’s head. My body relaxed in Jamil’s grip, but he didn’t let me go.
“Talk to me, Anita.”
“I’m alright.”
“He gives. We win. You get your leopards.” His hand went to my hand where it still gripped the sword. “Ease down, you won.”
I tried to keep the sword, but Jamil wasn’t happy until I let him take it. Then he moved slowly away from me, and I was left looking down at Coronus still kneeling on the floor, holding his claws against the blood that was flowing from his side. He looked up at me and coughed, a little blood touching his lips. He licked it off. “You nicked a lung.”
“It’s not silver. You’ll heal.”
He laughed, but it seemed to hurt him. “We’ll all heal,” he said.
“You better hope Gregory heals,” I said.
His black eyes flicked up to me, and there was something in that look that I didn’t like. “What is it, Coronus, what puts such unease in your eyes?” I went to my knees in front of him. My left arm hung nearly useless at my side, but it wasn’t numb anymore. A deep burning pain was working its way from the wounds at my shoulder and lower back. I purposefully didn’t look at them. I could feel the blood flowing down my skin in tickling lines. I kept my gaze on Coronus’s eyes.
He met my eyes for a minute while Jamil loomed over us, then Coronus’s gaze did a small slide to his right. I followed his look and saw Nathaniel across the wide room for the first time clearly. The world swam in streams of color, and I would have fallen to the floor if my right arm hadn’t caught me. It was partly from blood loss and shock, but not all of it was from the wounds. I could hear Coronus speaking through the dizziness and the nausea.
His words were tripping over each other. “Remember that it was the hyenas who made us stop. They who decreed that nothing else was to be done until your arrival. We would never have been so cruel unless we intended to kill him.”
My vision cleared, and all I could do was stare. Nathaniel was nude, hanging from his wrists, ankles chained like Gregory’s had been. But Nathaniel was facing the room. Knives bisected each tricep. Smaller blades had been forced through each hand so he couldn’t close his fingers around them. Thin knives had been forced through the bulk of the muscles just above each of his collarbones. Then the swords began.
Sword blades stuck out just below his collarbones. The blades gleamed silver, sprinkled with drying blood. Unlike the knives, the swords had been shoved in from behind so you couldn’t see the hilts.
A wide curved sword stuck out of Nathaniel’s right side, through the meat of his body. There were more, too big to be knives, too small to be swords, bisecting his thighs, his calves.
I was on my feet and didn’t even remember standing up. I was walking towards him, my left arm hanging down, blood spilling from my fingers. The one thing that I hadn’t expected when I saw the damage was his eyes. Those lilac eyes of his were open, staring at me, full of things that I didn’t want to understand. A gag filled his mouth, cut across that long auburn hair. He watched me with wide eyes as I walked to him.
I stood in front of Nathaniel and tried to get the gag out of his mouth, but I couldn’t do it one-handed. Faust was there, breaking the thong, helping me take it out gently. I touched Nathaniel’s mouth, trying to stop him from making any noise. I looked down the length of his body. All the blood! All the blood drying, stiff and tacky against his skin. I couldn’t not look at the blades, and from inches away I saw something that couldn’t be true. I lowered my hand from his mouth towards the sword blade that protruded from his upper chest. I touched the dried blood, rubbed at it with my fingertips. Nathaniel made a small moan. I didn’t stop, I had to be sure. I cleared the blood enough to see, enough to feel that his skin had closed around the blades. In the two hours it had taken me to get to this room, his body had reknit itself with the blades inside of him.
I dropped to my knees as if I’d been hit between the eyes. I tried to say something, but
no sound came out. Jamil was there, kneeling beside me. I grabbed a handful of the leather straps across his chest. There was fresh blood on him, wounds in his arms and chest.
I finally managed to say, “How, how do we . . . fix this?”
He looked up at Nathaniel. “We pull the blades out.”
I shook my head. “Help me up.” The blood loss and the sheer horror were catching up with me. I felt sick, dizzy. Jamil helped me stand in front of Nathaniel. “Do you understand what we’re going to have to do?”
Nathaniel looked at me with those purple eyes of his. “Yes,” he said, softly, almost no sound at all.
I gripped the knife that was in his quadricep, hand wrapping around the hilt. My lower lip was trembling, and my eyes felt hot. I stared into his eyes, no flinching, no looking away. I took a deep breath, and I pulled it out. His eyes closed, his head thrust backwards, breath coming out in a hissing rush. The flesh clung to the blade. It wasn’t like taking a knife out of a roast. The flesh hugged the blade as if it had grown around it.
The bloody knife fell from my hand, making a sharp sound on the cement floor. Nathaniel screamed. Jamil was behind him, and one of the swords was missing from Nathaniel’s upper chest. The other sword sucked back through his body as I watched. Nathaniel screamed again. Blood welled from the wound and I turned away. I looked back at Coronus still crouched on the floor, two of his people crowded around him. Something in the look on my face must have frightened him, because his eyes widened, and I saw something like human fear cross his reptilian face.
“We would have taken the blades out, but the hyenas ordered us not to touch either of them again until you arrived.”
I looked across the room at the guard that was closest to Nathaniel. The one that had looked unhappy to be there. He flinched under my gaze. “I was following orders.”
“Is that an excuse or a defense?”
“We don’t owe you an excuse,” the other guard said, the tall brown-haired one that had let us into the room. He was standing by the closed door. He was arrogant, defiant, and I could taste his fear like candy on my tongue. He was afraid of what I’d do.
Gregory came to stand near me in half-leopard, half-man form. I’d never seen him like this, all spotted fur, taller than his human form, more muscled. His genitalia hung large and healed between his legs.
One of the snake men was on the floor, dragging its legs behind it. Its spine was broken, but it would heal. Another scream tore from behind me, from Nathaniel’s throat. Another snake man was huddled against the far wall beside the chained brunette. Its arm was almost torn from its socket. Sylvie’s dress was in shreds, baring her breasts to the world. She didn’t seem to care, her hands still curled into claws, pale wolf eyes staring back at me.
“Take your leopards,” Coronus said, “and go in peace.”
Another scream came on the end of his words. “Peace,” I said. I felt strangely numb, like part of me was folding away. I couldn’t stand in this room and listen to Nathaniel’s screams, and feel. Not and stay sane. A quietness that I sunk into when I killed spilled over me, and it felt so much better. There are worse things than emptiness.
“Who are the women?”
“Swanmanes,” he said. “No concern of yours, Nimir-Ra.”
I looked at him and felt a smile curl my lips. I knew it was an unpleasant smile. “What happens to them when we leave?”
“They’ll heal,” he said. “We don’t want them dead.”
My smile widened, I couldn’t help it. I laughed, but it was a bad sound, even to me. “You expect me to leave them to your mercy?”
“They are swans not leopards. Why should you care?”
Nathaniel’s voice came thick, and when I turned I saw tears sliding down his face. “Don’t leave them. Please, don’t leave them here.”
Jamil pulled another blade out. Only three to go. Nathaniel didn’t scream this time, just closed his eyes and shivered. “Please, Anita, they would never have come here if I hadn’t asked them.”
I looked at the three women, chained naked to the walls, gagged, surrounded by dozens of clean, unused blades. They watched me with wide eyes, their breath coming in quick shallow pants. Their fear slid down my throat as if it were wine and I could drink it down, deep and cool. Fear, like wine, goes good with food. And I knew just by looking that they were food. They were swans, not predators. They were not us. I was channeling Richard now. I was being a smorgasbord of the boys tonight, of their thoughts and feelings. But there was one thing that was my own. Rage. Not the hot rage that the wolves used when they killed. This was something colder and more sure of itself. It was a rage that had nothing to do with blood and everything to do with . . . death. I wanted them all dead for what they’d done to Nathaniel and Gregory. I wanted them dead. By the rules, I couldn’t have them dead, but I’d do what I could. I’d cheat them of their other victims. I would not, could not, leave the three women here like this. I could not do it. Simple as that.
“Don’t worry, Nathaniel, we won’t leave them behind.”
“You have no right to them,” Coronus said.
Gregory growled at him. I touched Gregory’s furred arm. “It’s alright.” I looked at Coronus surrounded by his snakes. “If I were you I wouldn’t tell me what I have a right to. If I were you, I’d shut the fuck up and let us walk out of here with everyone we came for.”
“No, they are ours until their swan king rescues them.”
“Hey, he’s not here, but I am, and I say to you, Coronus of the Black Water Clan, that I will take the swanmanes with me. I will not leave them behind.”
“Why? Why do you care?”
“Why? Partly because I just don’t like you. Partly because I want you dead and I can’t do that tonight according to lycanthrope law. So I’ll cheat you of your prize. That will have to suffice. But don’t ever, ever get in my way again, because I will kill you, Coronus. I will kill you. In fact, I’d enjoy killing you.” I realized that was true. I often killed cold, but there was something in me tonight that wanted him dead. Revenge maybe. I didn’t question it, I just let it show in my eyes. I let the shapeshifter see it, because I knew he’d understand it. He wasn’t human; he knew death when it looked at him.
He did know. I saw the knowledge in his eyes, tasted that fresh spurt of fear like a chemical rush. He looked suddenly tired. “I would give them up if I could, but I cannot. I must have something to show for this night’s activities. I was hoping it would be the swans and the leopards, but if I cannot have one, I must have the other.”
“Why do you care about either the swans or the leopards?” I asked. “They are nothing to you, you cannot make them part of your tribe.”
His eyes shut down, unreadable. But that flash of fear grew, swelling in a rich odor of sweat and bitterness. He was very afraid. And it wasn’t of me, not exactly, but of something that would happen if he didn’t keep the swans. But what?
“I must keep them, Anita Blake.”
“Tell me why?”
“I cannot.” The fear was leaving him. Until that moment I never knew that resignation had a scent, but I could smell the quiet bitterness of defeat on him. It flared through me in a fierce wave, and I knew we’d won.
He shook his head. “I cannot give the swans up.”
“You’ve already lost them. I can smell the defeat on you.”
He bowed his head. “I would give them up if I could, but please, believe me, I cannot give them to you. I cannot.”
“Cannot, or will not?” I asked.
He smiled, and it was bitter like the odor from his skin. “Cannot.” Even his voice held reluctance, as if he wanted to just say yes, but couldn’t.
“Do what’s best for your people, Coronus, walk away from this.” I knew in some indefinable way that we would win. My will to win was greater than his. We would carry this night in victory. Some of the snakes would die, because their leader had lost his nerve. Without his strength of will to buoy them, they could not win. They
didn’t want to be here. I looked at each of them, and in turn, they scented the air as I stared at them. Defeat hung over them like smoke; they had no will to win. They didn’t want to be here. So why were they here? Their alpha, their leader, was here, and his will was theirs. So why were they all weak, as if something was missing inside their group, something that made them weak?
I realized with a start that this was what everyone had sensed from the leopards before I came to them . . . this smell of weakness and defeat. Nathaniel was weak. But now my will was his, and I was not weak. I turned to stare into his face, his eyes, and I saw through all the pain, the torture, that he was not hopeless. When I first met him, Nathaniel had had the most hopeless eyes I’d ever seen. But he knew I’d come. He’d known with an absolute certainty that I would not leave him here like this. Gregory could doubt, because he thought with that part of him that was human. But Nathaniel trusted me with something that had nothing to do with logic, and everything to do with truth.
I turned back to Coronus. “Run away from this, Coronus, or some of you won’t see dawn.”
He sighed heavily. “So be it.” And then he did what he shouldn’t have done. Something that had no logic to it, from a nonhuman point of view. He was going to lose, and he knew it. Yet he did a very human thing. He attacked us anyway. Only humans waste energy like that when they’ve been given an out.
The two snakes guarding Coronus suddenly launched themselves at me, and I was too close. I’d been so sure with my new werewolf senses that they wouldn’t fight us. I’d been careless. I’d forgotten that in the end we’re only half animal. And that human half will fuck you every time.
They came in a blur of speed too fast for me to do anything but start for the other boot knife. I knew I’d never reach it. Gregory leaped in a butter-colored streak, taking one snake out in midair, rolling on the floor. But the other one was on me, claws slashing down before I hit the ground with it riding me. I was already going numb; it didn’t hurt. The claws ripped at my stomach, diving through the cloth of my shirt to the flesh underneath. I felt it digging for my heart. I raised my right hand to try and grab the wrist, but it felt like I was moving in slow motion. My hand seemed to weigh a thousand pounds, and distantly I knew I was hurt, badly hurt. Something bad had happened in that first blur of claws.
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