“You’re lucky I must be some type of giant bug repellent,” I call over my shoulder.
None of them say anything in response to that. Which they are a little busy dodging more of those blades that I just run right through.
“Right now, I wish we had her ability,” Jude growls as he slices through one of the blades just before it can take his head off.
By comparison his sword is tiny, but it has no trouble splitting the giant saw blade in half. He dives and rolls, putting his sword up and grabbing his two piece bo staff out like he’s about to fight something.
The rest of the people who aren’t them are lagging way behind, struggling with the reemergence of that giant bug from hell.
Again, that might be a literal reference.
I turn around just as Jude leaps into the air. A true giant beast—not exactly a man—with one eye and veiny skin is bringing his fist down.
Jude spins in the air, coming down with just one part of the bo staff, hitting the monster in the face so hard he flies backwards. Dirt scatters into the air, causing some of the fog to lift and make room.
Tingles spread over me as Ezekiel runs right through me, launching himself into the air and coming down with his sword. It slashes the cyclops’s chest, spilling blood everywhere, and then Jude shoves his hand into the fresh hole.
My mouth goes slack as the giant’s eye bulges, and his body turns to ash that Jude breaks through. He walks away like it’s a common occurrence.
They slice through about five more of those, and Jude keeps turning them to ash.
A shot of fire launches out, almost connecting with Kai’s head, and my hand flies up on instinct. The fire diverts, shooting backwards. I hear screams in the background and grimace, but I drop my hold on the fire the second Kai is out of the path.
The fire shoots through me, and I run out to see Kai’s jaw hard while he studies me.
“Feel free to start sharing some gratitude when I save your lives,” I grumble, passing through him and the wall behind him.
It’s all dirt and bugs and holey canals where creatures live, as I run through the wall they’ll have to go all the way around. Surely they can survive while I scout ahead.
Just as I burst through to the other side, my stomach sinks. I can’t see them at first, but I sense their dark presence. Things become more obvious as I stare at the walls, seeing the subtle differences in the rocks.
Ten men at least.
I turn and run back, catching the guys before they’re about to come around the corner.
“Stop!” I shout, and the four of them come to an abrupt halt.
It surprises me so much that they listen that I almost forget they’re waiting on me to tell them why I just screamed stop.
“At least ten men are waiting to ambush someone, likely the four of you because of that conspiracy stuff you were spilling on about.”
The horn to announce deaths blows four times, as though it wanted to make this moment more ominous.
“They blend in perfectly with the walls. There could be more that I didn’t see,” I go on.
“Chameleons,” Jude says to the other guys.
“There’s only one reason why upper level assassins would be in the gauntlet,” Ezekiel groans.
Jude puts his two pieces of his bo staff together to create the long, shimmering metal stick, and he spins it in his hand as a dark smile curves his lips.
“I think we can handle ten of them,” Kai says as he pulls out his swords, not his sai.
“There could be more,” I remind him.
I’m ignored. I guess they’re done listening to me.
“On one,” Ezekiel says with a grin that matches Jude’s.
“One?” I ask, confused.
They all dart through me or by me, and my breath rushes out as I turn to chase them. Apparently I said the magic word.
Jude is already throwing the bo staff through the chest of one as he breaks away from the wall, coming after him.
His eyes widen as the staff breaks through the skin, and he drops to the ground, a look of pure disbelief on his face. Then his gaze lands on me as the life drains from his eyes.
He holds my stare, and I freeze, certain he sees me. But as he collapses to the side, lifeless, I return my attention to the guys. An awed breath escapes me at how they seem to fight like they can read each other’s minds.
Jude ducks as Kai swings a sword, decapitating two of the men rushing Jude from behind. Jude snatches his bo staff out of the other guy’s chest, and spins it, putting it through the neck of one guy who is still hidden against the wall.
Ezekiel takes a hard hit to his side, but he immediately slams a sword through the guy’s chest and twists it as the guy screams in pain. His head dips as Gage’s sword swings by, catching the throat of another attacker.
The four of them work like their own well-oiled army. I prop up and watch, unable to look away.
A man runs right through me, charging Ezekiel from behind, but Gage throws his sword, catching the guy in the face.
He drops, and I frown.
“I thought these were upper level assassins,” I state as the final one lands in a heap. More than ten. Definitely more than ten.
“They are,” Ezekiel says as he jerks his sword out of a man’s body that is pinned to the rocks.
The body drops lifelessly as he wipes the blood off his sword.
“The reason they want us dead so badly, is because we’re far stronger than we should be. And if we can get into the underworld, we might be able to stop the coup before there’s a purge,” Jude answers as he starts stalking down the gauntlet again.
We’re now way ahead of the other competitors.
“There’s a moment between life and death when people seem to be able to see me. Other than that guy I touched. Clearly upper level royalty can’t even see me unless that moment occurs, since the heirs couldn’t. So I’m assuming my touch had something to do with that one guy, because aside from the four of you, he’s the only one who has seen me outside of the in-between moment of life and death,” I state more to myself than anyone.
I’m used to talking aloud to them, expecting them not to answer because they can’t hear me.
I’m surprised when Kai speaks. “It would make sense if you’re suspended in the same state. But it doesn’t explain how you’re getting stronger instead of weaker.”
“Maybe I’m just really hard to kill,” I suggest.
A sword slices through me as if summoned by that brazen proclamation, and my eyes widen as a man charges by, that sword aimed at Jude.
He dispatches him quickly, and my heart slows down again.
“Eyes open in case we missed more,” Kai says, rotating his sword in his hand as he looks around, still walking.
I move way out ahead, growing queasy when I see a massive pit of moving lava blocking the path. The volcanic river that floats through probably isn’t very inviting.
The guys join me at the ledge, viewing the hundred or more feet in front of us.
“Can’t go around this,” Jude curses. “We’d have to leave the gauntlet to do that.”