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Magic Strikes(21)



three stories tall, stretching into the night for what seemed like forever. Buildings of this size were

rare in Atlanta.

Something about the location tugged on me. «Wasn't there something else here?»

«The Cooler. This used to be Atlanta's ice-skating rink. Obviously, we've made some

modifications.»

I chewed on that «we.» «Are you a member of the House, Saiman?»

«No. But Thomas Durand is.» He indicated his new face with an elegant sweep of his hand.

Not only I was going to an underground tournament dressed like a bimbo, but my escort owned a

chunk of it. Great. Since I had gambling and illegal combat covered, maybe afterward I could score

some drugs and high-class hookers for an encore. I sighed and tried to look as though I didn't kill

things for a living.

«Are those blades in your hair?» Saiman asked.

«No. Putting sharp-bladed things into your hair isn't a good idea.»

«Why not?»

«First, someone could hit you in the head, driving the blades into your scalp. Second, eventually

you have to pull the blades out. I have no desire to dramatically unsheathe my hair weapons and end

up with half of my hair sliced off and a giant bald spot.»

A wooden tower clawed at the sky about a hundred yards from the Arena, close enough to cover

the entire roof with the fire of the machine guns and cheiroballistae mounted on the platform at its

top. The people manning the tower wore distinctive black-and-red uniforms.

«Red Guard?»

«Yes.»

«I guess blood sport pays.» Otherwise the hosts of this little shindig wouldn't be able to hire the

most expensive guard unit in the city. I knew a few Red Guardsmen, and they deserved their pay. A

few years ago I had considered joining them for the steady paycheck, but the work was dull as hell.

«The Coliseum, the pride and joy of Rome, could seat fifty thousand people.» Saiman permitted

himself a smile. «Fifty thousand spectators at a time when the horse was the most efficient method

of transportation. Blood sport pays, indeed. It also attracts rule breakers, which is why the

Guardsmen patrol both the outer perimeter and the inside, especially the ground floor, which

surrounds the Pit, where the fights take place. The fighters' rooms are located there and the House

doesn't tolerate any squabbles outside the Pit.»

My evening had just gotten a lot more complicated. Tag along with Saiman, give him the slip

using the ninja skills I didn't have, get past the best guards in Atlanta, penetrate the ground floor

full of gladiators, find the girl with dark hair, hand her the note, and get back before Saiman

suspected anything amiss. Piece of cake. Could do it in my sleep. Once again, I felt a distinct urge

to punch Derek in the mouth.

We crossed a two-foot-wide, fluorescent white line painted on the pavement.

«Why the line?»

«We are now under the protection of the Guards,» Saiman answered. «Inside the line they take an

interest in our welfare-up to a point. Outside the line, we're on our own.»

«Ever had deaths in the parking lot?»

«If you weren't an agent of the Order, I'd tell you we had two in the last month. But since you

are, I have to claim ignorance.» Saiman gave me a coy smile. Spare me.

We headed toward the brightly lit entrance, flanked by four Red Guards, two armed with

automatic weapons and the other two carrying Chinese spears decorated with crimson silk

standards. Odd choice of weapons but they looked pretty.

Saiman and I passed between them and stepped through the narrow arched entrance into a

hallway. A woman stood in our way, sandwiched between two male Red Guards who looked as

though they lived for a chance to run into the woods with a fifty-pound rucksack so they could blow

up a loup compound. Their boss was slightly taller than me, a shade leaner, cinched into a light

brown leather vest and armed with a rapier. Her right hand was bare, but a thick leather glove

shielded her left. A sheen of emerald green coated the rapier's blade as if it were made of green

bottle glass. Ten to one, enchanted.

I gave the woman a once-over. Short red hair. Clear gray eyes. I looked into the eyes and saw a

hard-ass looking back.

«Rene. As always, a pleasure.» Saiman did his ticket trick again and handed the two rectangles to

Rene.

Rene favored the tickets with a glance, returned them to Durand, and fixed me with a territorial

stare making it obvious the ao dai hadn't fooled her for a second. «Don't kill anybody in my

building.»

«Do your job right and I won't have to.»

I let Saiman lead me away, down the hallway. He bent to me and said in a confidential voice,

«Rene is-«