CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
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Yasuo, Emma, and I stood together, ready to
watch Lilac’s semifinal match. The winner would face me, that
night, in the final round.
My body trembled. My ears rang, my hands throbbed,
and pains and twinges riddled my body. And yet unspent energy
coursed through me. I’d fought—truly fought.
“You okay?” Emma asked.
Her voice brought me back to myself. “Yeah,
actually. I’m okay.”
“You won’t be, if you have to fight her.”
Yasuo nodded at Lilac.
The fight hadn’t begun yet, but both contenders
stood on the platform, stretching out, bouncing on their feet,
psyching up. Her opponent looked nervous, but Lilac just looked
ready.
“Lilac might not win.” Emma sounded
tentative.
I gave her a half hearted smile. “Thanks,
Em.”
“Not win the semis?” Yasuo shook his head in
disbelief. “Are you kidding? Von Slut-thing’s going to butcher that
girl. She’s owned every single one of her opponents.”
He was right. Tracers had gathered by the platform,
standing by.
Emma stared in wonder. “Where do they take them
all?”
“You tell us, Yas,” I said. “You’re the vamp in
training. What happens to the not-quite-dead girls?”
Emma grew preternaturally still. “I wonder if this
whole thing isn’t just a way for the vampires to cull the weak from
the herd.”
Yasuo rolled his eyes. “Thank you, Farm Girl.” He
turned his focus on me. “Enough speculation. Now, listen up, D. All
signs point to you fighting Lilac tonight. You need a
strategy.”
I nodded weakly, feeling ill. Strategy wasn’t good
for much when your opponent didn’t feel pain.
“What’s her deal, anyway?” Yas asked, and we all
turned our eyes to her.
Lilac was long and lean, with that maple hair
pulled back into a sleek braid. She looked entitled, confident, and
gorgeous, in a vanilla sort of way. I shrugged. “Rich . . . white .
. . boarding school. I don’t know.”
He snorted. “Maybe she learned all her crazy-ass
moves playing field hockey.”
“It doesn’t matter.” Emma roused to life. “You
could beat her.”
Good old naive Emma. She had no idea what I would
be up against if Lilac won the semifinals.
The gong sounded. It was time for Lilac’s
match.
The girls stepped to the middle of the platform. It
was Lilac versus a tall Valkyrie-looking creature with
close-cropped hair, perfectly cut biceps, and cheekbones that went
on for days.
The gong sounded a second time, and Lilac sprang
from her corner, swinging her weapon over her head. My friends and
I laughed nervously, seeing that she’d chosen a shinai, the long,
bamboo sword we used in Japanese kendo practice.
My blood ran cold. “What the hell is she planning
to do with that?”
“That won’t cut anyone,” Emma said.
“Duh.” Yas shook his head. “But that thing’s got
reach, and she’s got power. Sorry, D. I don’t get how any of your
blades will do you any good. Not that girlie little switchblade,
and not those stars, either.”
A third gong tore my eyes from him.
We stared at Lilac’s opponent on the platform. By
the way she writhed around, clutching at her neck, it looked like
Lilac had just jousted her in the throat.
“It’s over already?” Emma whispered. The fight had
gone on for less than ten seconds.
Priti’s voice was clear above the crowd. “Acari
Lilac advances to the final round.”
“Crap,” Yasuo muttered.
I looked at Lilac, and her gaze was waiting for me.
We locked eyes. She looked eager, raging.
I wanted the Directorate Award. I wanted off the
island. But did I want it badly enough to face a girl who was more
physically adept than me, who felt no pain, and who’d held me
locked in her sights from day one?
My body went cold. “Looks like I’m fighting
Lilac.”
“You can do it,” Emma said.
I kept my face blank, but inside I was freaking
out. “What if I can’t stop her?”
“You’ve been able to do it in these last matches,”
Yas said. “Pretend this is just another one.”
But it wasn’t, because von Slutling was like the
Terminator. “You don’t get it.”
Emma leaned close. “Lilac may be the best fighter
in our class, but you can outsmart her.”
Yas nodded agreement. “You’re smaller, D, and that
makes you wily. Defensively, you’re solid. Plus you have that fancy
brain of yours. Outthink her.”
“No, seriously, guys. You don’t get it.” They both
opened their mouths to protest, but I cut them off. “Lilac doesn’t
feel pain.”
That shut them up.
I regretted it instantly. Ronan had sworn me to
secrecy. But I told myself not to feel guilty—information like that
was too huge to keep to myself. For all I knew, this was the last
time I’d talk to my friends; I had to warn them. “But you can’t
tell anyone.”
“Yeah, yeah,” Yasuo said, waving off my statement.
“I get it. It’s a secret. But how did you—” Understanding dawned in
his eyes. “Ronan told you, didn’t he?”
Now I felt guilty. Who deserved my
allegiance more? Ronan, who had flashes of understanding but who’d
also been the one to bring me here? Or Yas, my best bud, who’d one
day have a big set of fangs gleaming against his undead skin? I
shouldn’t have opened my mouth.
I gave him a tense nod and was grateful when Emma
broke the silence. She was looking at me in utter disbelief. “But
everyone feels pain. Everybody feels something. Eventually.”
I glanced at my enemy. She was greeting her
well-wishers in the audience. Bruises and scratches covered every
inch of visible skin, but still she slinked around like a cat. “Not
von Slutling.”
“How can she not feel pain?” Emma sounded
perplexed.
“Rare genetic disorder? Mommy drank too many in
vitro cosmos? How the hell should I know?”
Yasuo’s eyes widened in question. “But you’re still
going through with it?”
I came close to saying no. It would’ve been so
easy. But I sensed Master Alcántara’s gaze on me, and that morbid
fascination shivered up my skin. It left confidence in its
wake.
I was the best student. I had the
most potential. The award belonged to me, though doubts nagged at
the back of my mind as I wondered how much I was driven by pride,
how much by the urge to escape, and how much I simply wanted to
beat the crap out of my roommate. “I am.”
Yasuo sighed. “Then let’s do this thing.” He turned
and openly studied me. “Okay. Headlines.” He crossed his arms over
his chest, determined to distill the whole situation to fine
points. “The girl’s got height on you. She feels no pain—whatever
that means. And her gift is fire?”
“Her gift is pain, and her skill is
fire.”
Yas threw his hands up. “What the hell does that
mean? Fire? Dude, you’re psyched she’s not busting any of that out
here.”
“How do you know she won’t?” Emma asked.
Yasuo countered, “How could she? How would someone
here even fight with fire?”
I’d wondered the same thing. “I don’t know.
Flamethrower? Though I definitely would’ve seen it if she’d been
hiding that in our room.”
“She could spit flames,” Emma said. “Like in the
circus.”
Yasuo stared at her, his eyes wide. “Girl, you
amaze me. Were you raised in a barn? Oh. wait. You were, weren’t
you?”
Emma shot him one of her rare smiles.
Were they flirting? “Guys, can we get back on
topic?”
I could’ve sworn Emma blushed.
“Let’s talk weapons,” Yasuo said. “You’re not going
to use that knife again, are you?”
“Do you have a better idea? A knife suited me just
fine in the last fight.” My tone was a little prickly. I considered
myself pretty decent at blade work.
Yasuo put his arm around me, but he kept his eyes
glued to Lilac. He leaned down, talking low. “Yeah, Drew, you’re
good. But this fight . . . it’s going to go fast. You’re going to
grapple. Von Slutling’s not exactly going to flash her exposed back
like your Draug did.”
“Why not use your stars?” Emma asked.
“Who says I don’t have them? A little duct tape, a
couple makeshift pockets, and voilà.” I hiked up my wide-legged
sparring pants and waggled my ankle. “I stowed them on the side of
my boots.”
“Neat.” A smile flickered on Emma’s face and was
gone. “But isn’t that against the rules?”
“The rule is ‘Acari may carry one weapon into
the ring.’ Get it? Carry. Like, in your hand.” I
smiled innocently. “I’m just following the letter of the law.
That’s what they taught us to do, right?”
It was evening by the time our fight rolled around,
the sky an eerie half-light, like the sun was shining in from
another room. Master Alcántara stood between Lilac and me on the
platform. His mischievous smile told me he was enjoying every
minute of the spectacle.
Alcántara said something to her—I’d have done
anything to hear—and then he came to me.
“Cuídate, cariño.” His whisper was
mellow and sultry with promises. Goose bumps shimmered over my
skin, and I had to blink hard to clear my head. He chuckled, low
and throaty. “That’s it. Keep your head. Sharp wits are deadlier
than any blade.”
The palm of the hand that held the knife began to
sweat. Was this all some sort of cruel lesson that combat came down
to wits?
I panicked. I’d picked the wrong weapon. A
switchblade would be worthless. Especially against that long bamboo
sword.
Watcher Priti sounded the first gong.