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Magic Strikes(95)



«More like they're fixing to give us a hell of a stomach-ache.» Curran loaded more bacon on his

plate.

For people who frequently turned into animals and ate their prey raw, they sure were a choosy

lot.

«Kate makes good sausage,» Jim said.

Six pairs of eyes stared at me. Thank you, Mr. Wonderful. Just what I needed.

«Oh yeah.» Andrea snapped her fingers. «The links? The ones we had the beginning of the

month? I didn't know you made those. I thought they were bought. They were so good.» Her smile

was positively cherubic. Of all the times not to be able to shoot laser beams out of my eyes . . .

«What do you put into your sausage, Kate?» Raphael wanted to know, giving me a perfectly

innocent look.

Werejaguars with big mouths with a pinch of werehyena thrown in. «Venison and rabbit.»

«That sounds like some fine sausage,» Doolittle said. «Will you share the recipe?»

«Sure.»

«I had no idea you were a sausage expert,» Curran said with a completely straight face.

Die, die, die, die. . . .

Even Derek cracked a smile. Raphael put his head down on the table and jerked a little.

«Is he choking?» Dali asked, wrinkling her forehead.

«No, he just needs a moment,» Curran said. «Young bouda males. Easily excitable.»

«Who are we fighting today?» I asked, wishing I could brain him with something heavy.

«Rouge Rogues,» Jim said.

«That's a joke, right?» Andrea's eyebrows crept up.

Jim shook his head. «No. Led by a Frenchman. He calls himself Cyclone. A bad bunch.»

«The Frenchman knows me,» I said.

Jim's gaze fixed on me. «How well?»

«Well enough,» Curran said. «He's scared of her.»

«Did he ever see you fighting?» Andrea asked.

«Yes. A long time ago.»

«How long?» Jim asked. «How well does he know how you fight?»

If he tried to take me out of this fight, I'd rip him to shreds. «It was twelve years ago in Peru. I

seriously doubt he remembers the finer points of my swordwork.»

«What were you doing in Peru?» Raphael asked.

«Fighting in Hoyo de Sangre.» I watched it sink in. Yes, I was thirteen. No, I didn't want to talk

about it. «As I said, it's irrelevant. He's a professional gladiator. He tours from arena to arena,

drawn by prizes. He's a strong air mage and he favors basic powerful spells. He'll likely try an air

lock or a hold. What else does he have on his team?»

Jim looked as if he'd bitten a lemon. «Assuming they will bring their best, he's got a troll as their

Stone, a golem Swordmaster, and a vampire Shiv. A very old vampire.»

«How old?» I asked.

«Olathe old,» Jim said.

Inwardly I cringed. Olathe, Roland's former concubine, had used ancient vampires so old, they

had to have become undead before the Shift, the first magic wave, when technically they weren't

supposed to have existed. A vampire was an abomination in progress. The older a vampire grew,

the more pronounced were the changes the Immortuus pathogen inflicted onto its once-human body

and the more dangerous it became.

«The golem is silver,» Jim said. «Sprouts blades in weird places. Preternaturally fast. Can't be

cut; can't be pierced. The troll's hide is also nearly impossible to penetrate. I saw a spear bounce

off. It worries me.»

It would worry anybody. The vampire alone, even if the other three were paper cutouts, would

give me a pause. As it was, the lineup was nearly impossible to beat. The vamp was deadly and

wickedly fast. With two extra fighters and a mage, keeping the vamp from Dali would be nearly

impossible.

Olathe had gotten her vampires from Roland's stable when she had fled him. Where did Cyclone

get an ancient vampire, especially with the People's Warlord sitting right there in the stands?

I could crush the vamp's mind, but not without giving myself away.

«I can take the bloodsucker,» Dali said. «If the magic is up.»

Jim grimaced. «This isn't a regular vampire. You've never seen one like that. It's old.»

She shook her head. «The older, the better. But it will take everything I got. I can do it once and

that's it. Then I'll need a nap.»

I looked at Dali. If she took out the vamp, they would lock on her. Four to three, lousy odds,

especially with an air mage in the mix. There was a way I could make her safe. It would be a foolish

and reckless move under normal circumstances. But with d'Ambray watching, it qualified as mind-

numbingly stupid.

If she failed, she had no protection against the vampire. It would tear into her and I would hear