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Magic Strikes(50)



«He's a teddy bear,» I said.

Teddy bear looked like he was suffering from murder withdrawal. Rene grinned. «He certainly

is. First room on the right, get yourself logged in.» Rene glanced at the doors, where Saiman was

making his grand entrance. «Hurry now. Your ex is coming through. We don't want him getting

hysterical again.»



THE FIGHTER LEVEL WAS BASICALLY A LONG hallway forming a ring. Red Guards

were thick in the hallway like flies on a dead horse. Big deadly flies, armed with Tasers, chains, and

nets. No fights would break out there. Inside the ring lay a large exercise room located directly

under the Pit. Outside the ring branched off fighter quarters: sets of rooms where the fighters waited

for their bouts.

Jim leaned against the doorframe of our room, like some dark sentinel. The patrolmen gave him

a wide berth.

I sat at a bench. I had inspected our quarters: the front room where we waited now was long and

narrow, a bottleneck. No door separated us from the hallway. In case of trouble, a couple of Guards

could easily contain a dozen people or more within the room.

On the left a door led to a narrow locker room with a bench and three showers and off it was a

small bathroom with three toilets, separated by partitions. Behind me another door led to a large

bedroom housing eight double bunks. The Order's files said the teams were sequestered once the

tournament began and for three days they lived in their fighting quarters.

Above us the crowd roared, enthused by someone's death.

Guilt gnawed on me. It haunted and stalked me, just waiting to pounce when I had a dull

moment. I should have kept Derek from being hurt. As they had beat him, in the parking lot, he had

been utterly alone. He knew no help would be coming. That was his last memory: the molten silver

being poured on his face.

My heart clenched. I tried to make some words come out, anything to keep thoughts out of my

head. «My father would've approved of this place. Of all the arenas he took me to, this is the best

equipped and best secured.»

Jim's gaze was still firmly fixed on the hallway and the patrols. «What kind of father would take

a kid to the slaughter?»

«The kind who wanted his daughter to get used to death. I guess you could say I turned out

according to his plan.»

«Yeah. He teach you to talk a lot of shit, too?»

«Nope. Picked it up from you.»

We sat in silence.

«My dad hated killing,» Jim said. «Couldn't do it, even when he had to.»

«Not everybody grows up to be a monster.»

Another thump. The noise of the spectators died down to a hum. I got out my throwing knives

and began polishing them with a cloth.

«He was human,» Jim said.

«The Pack never turned him?»

«No.»

Jim was half. Could've fooled me by the way he treated outsiders. Usually mates of shapeshifters

became shapeshifters themselves.

«How did it go over with the cat clan?»

Jim gave a barely perceptible shrug. «We're cats. We mind our own business. He was welcome,

because he was a doctor. Not many physicians in the Pack. Doolittle and he were friends. Graduated

together.»

I remembered Saiman's words. He said Jim killed the man who had murdered his father while

they were both incarcerated. «How did he end up in prison?»

«One of the lynx children went loup. A little girl. She was ten. The alpha was out and the parents

brought her to him to be put down. Humane death and all that shit.»

Once a shapeshifter went loup, there was no return.

«He couldn't do it,» Jim said. «He gave her an injection and she went to sleep. He told the family

he wanted the body to see if he could autopsy it and find out what caused loupism. They believed

him. He hid her in a cage in the basement. Took tissue samples to try and find the cure. She broke

out and killed two people before we caught her and put her down. One of them was a pregnant

woman. There was a trial. He got twenty-five to life.»

Jim still wasn't looking at me. «His second day in prison a lowlife called David Stiles stabbed

him in the liver. Later I found David, and I asked him why. He wasn't in the position to lie. You

know what he said?» Jim turned to me. «He said he felt like it. No reason.»

I didn't know what to say.

«My father helped people. He treated a loup kid like she was normal. I treated a normal kid like

he was loup and six years later sent him to have his face beaten off his head. Doolittle tells me he's

fading. He doesn't have long. If my dad was alive, he'd spit in my face.»

It was an old wound and he'd ripped the scab off and left it raw for me to see. I had no salve to