22
Cleopatra opened her throat and roared into
the brightness, her body vibrating with the sound. She was still in
the tunnel’s mouth, and could not see what was happening in the
arena. She could hear only the emperor’s voice claiming her
children, mocking her husband. The other lions surged forward with
her, the dust flying behind her paws as she charged into the Circus
Maximus.
The bestiarii awaited her, each with his sword and
trembling knees. Some were brave, standing firm in the face of the
wall of charging wild cats. Others tried to flee, though there was
nowhere to go. A trench surrounded the fighting floor. Cleopatra
judged it, assessing the leap.
There.
High in the stands, his toga shining, the evildoer.
And beside him, on either side—
Her children.
Selene in the center, her hands grabbing the boys,
the little one wide-eyed, and the elder, looking equally startled.
Selene grappled with them, tugging their hands.
The emperor, between them, looked straight at the
fighting, his gray eyes glinting and lustful. Beside him, a
dark-skinned man stood, his dagger drawn, his face watchful, a
serpent twining about his arms.
What was standing on his other side? A very young
woman, glowing with some strange inner light, had her hand on the
shoulder of a man. Cleopatra could not quite see him. He flickered,
transparent. An actor, painted to look like Antony. It must
be.
Cleopatra lashed forward with a paw, clawing the
arm of the bestiarii before her. She did not desire to kill him,
and so she dodged his sword. He did not wield it well, in any case.
Some of the fighters were screaming and slashing with their eyes
closed. Dust flew up and obscured the bleeding lion beside her. The
rhinoceros heaved his way up from below the stadium, its great
ivory horn as sharp as a dagger, and its eyes flashing black and
beady as it began to run, thundering across the circus.
Cleopatra caught sight of a sword, slicing directly
at her head, and leapt forward to tear the fighter’s throat,
savoring, even if only for a moment, the heat of his blood.
She gathered her haunches and lunged at the stands,
feeling the dead weight of a lioness beside her, anchoring her to
the ground.
She gloried in her invisibility, straining at the
chain that bound her and feeling the links stretch, the metal
protesting. They did not know her. They had no idea she was coming.
At last, she felt the chain break, whipping out from her throat and
lashing across the ground. Red splattered her eyes and the moans of
the dying rose around her.
Her muscles tensed for the leap over the trench,
and for a graceful moment, she was in the air, high above the
crowd, higher than any true lion could leap.
Augustus’s face was shocked and upturned. She could
see his heart beating through his throat. Terrified of her at last.
He had underestimated Cleopatra.
The force of her landing threw the emperor to the
ground, and he cowered on his back before her.
“You took my family!” she screamed, her voice still
that of a lioness. She dug her claws into his shoulders, relishing
his terror. “You took my country!”
“Get it off me!” the emperor shrieked. His eyes
were wide, and reflecting in them, Cleopatra could see two female
figures. First an old woman, and then a young. The elder had a
distaff in her hands, and she raised it in the air, spinning it so
swiftly, Cleopatra could scarcely see it move. The old woman looked
into the queen’s lioness body and saw her. Her eyes flashed
silver-white, and Cleopatra felt her body begin to weaken as though
she was suddenly bound with ropes, caught in a web.
The young girl rose up from her seat, smiled and
lifted her hands, throwing some glittering substance into the
air.
It showered over Cleopatra, and for a moment,
Cleopatra was no longer a lion. She felt herself melt back into her
human form, crouched atop Augustus in his laurel crown, her fingers
bloodied.
She did not care.
Everything ceased to matter as she finally saw the
face of the man who stood beside the witches, the man she’d thought
an impersonation of her husband.
“Antony!” she screamed.
The knowledge ripped through her. It could be
nothing but dreaming—but she reached out her hands to touch him.
Did she imagine it? Did he cringe back from her?
She did touch him, an almost him, a faint him, with
her fingertips, just as someone leapt upon her and tore her from
her husband again.