Before I could move, much less try to stop him, Lance waved the gold scepter in the air three times in a sharp figure-eight motion.
Ian and I both surged forward, but three clouds of thick, black smoke boiled out from the end of the scepter, driving us back. I coughed and coughed, trying to clear the sulfur stench out of my lungs. But instead of dissipating the way normal smoke would, these clouds drew in on themselves. In an instant, they solidified into familiar, distinctive shapes.
Three chimeras now stood in the middle of the office, snarling and spewing smoke everywhere.
“Kill her!” Lance ordered the creatures. “Kill the Spartan girl! Kill them all!”
*
I was a step ahead of Ian, front and center, and all three chimeras sprang at me at once.
“Get back!” I screamed at Ian and Zoe. “Back! Back! Back!”
Ian cursed and pushed Zoe behind him. And that was all I saw before the creatures were on me.
I ducked one chimera, making it slam into the second one, but the third one had a straight shot at me—and me at it. I whirled around, already snapping up Babs for the attack that I knew was coming next.
Crash!
The chimera’s paws caught me square on the shoulders and knocked me to the floor. I landed on my back, and the creature fell right on top of me, driving the air out of my lungs, but I wrapped both hands around Babs’s hilt and shoved the sword straight up into its heart. The chimera threw back its head and screamed at the mortal wound, making me wince, then disintegrated into a cloud of smoke. I ignored the burning sensation of the smoke slithering across my skin and scrambled back up onto my feet.
Lance growled with frustration that I was still alive, but Drake shoved him toward the glass patio doors at the back of the office.
“Move!” Drake yelled. “Get out of here! Now!”
Lance yanked open one of the doors and sprinted outside. I started after him, but the other two chimeras jumped to their feet and cut me off, so I attacked the creatures.
I swung my sword left and right, spinning, dodging, ducking, and twirling, letting my Spartan killer instincts take over and guide me through the fight. Everything else disappeared except for the feel of Babs’s hilt in my hand, the whisper of her blade slicing through the air, the bunch and flex of my muscles stopping the chimeras’ attacks, then the quick counterstrikes of my own sword cutting into their bodies.
The creatures screamed, and their blood splattered all over me, but I kept moving, fighting, attacking. Determination raged through me to cut down the chimeras and then do the same thing to Lance.
I battled first one chimera, then the other. Zoe brandished her electrodagger at the creatures and looked for an opening, but she couldn’t get into the fight for fear of hitting me, and she couldn’t move past me to help Ian either.
The Viking was battling his brother.
Ian and Drake moved back and forth through the office, knocking over chairs, tables, and lamps, snarling and slashing their swords at each other over and over again. Their Viking strength was so great that sparks shot off their blades where the weapons crashed together time and time again. Add those to the blue sparks spitting out of Zoe’s fingertips, and I felt like I was standing in the middle of a giant fireworks show.
I sliced my sword across the stomach of the second chimera, making it disappear in a cloud of smoke, then whirled around and stabbed the third creature in the throat. It too vanished, and I finally had a clear path to the patio doors that Lance had gone through. I headed in that direction—
“Ian!” Zoe screamed. “Look out!”
I whirled around.
Drake lashed out with a vicious blow, forcing Ian back. Ian didn’t see the Reaper sword lying on the ground behind him, and he stumbled over it and fell down. His head clipped the corner of the desk, stunning him, and his sword slipped from his hand and dropped to the floor.
“Ian!” Zoe screamed again. “Ian!”
She raised her dagger and ran forward, but Drake stepped up and punched her in the stomach. His Viking strength threw her all the way across the room. Zoe hit the wall, rattling the weapons there, and fell to the floor. The hard, bruising impact made blue sparks explode in the air all around her, but they winked out an instant later. Zoe didn’t move after that, and I could tell that she was unconscious.
“And now, little brother,” Drake hissed, “I’m going to show you what it feels like to die for real.”
Drake slashed his sword down, and Ian threw his hand up in a desperate attempt to block the blow.
I rammed my body into Drake’s, knocking him away from Ian and sending us both tumbling to the floor. Drake snarled and lashed out with his sword, trying to gut me, but I rolled out of the way. I started to get back up, but I hit one of the unconscious Reapers. My feet got tangled in his long black cloak, and I floundered around on the floor.
“Die, Spartan!” Drake hissed again, lifting his sword high.
Just like Ian, I raised my hand, trying to ward off the deathblow that I knew was coming.
Ian surged forward and threw himself at his brother. He hit Drake around the knees, driving him back against the desk. Drake lashed out with his sword, slicing it all the way across Ian’s arm, shoulder, and back. Ian yelled with pain and fell to the floor.
I finally managed to kick free of the Reaper cloak and get back up onto my feet. I swung my own sword out in a wide, reckless arc. Not because I had any chance of hitting Drake but to make him lurch away from Ian and keep him from killing the other Viking.
It worked.
Drake snarled, turned around, and ran out the same patio door Lance had gone through.
I rushed over to Ian. “Are you okay?”
He waved his hand, blood dripping off his fingers. “I’m fine! Go! Get him! Don’t let him get away!”
I hesitated, my gaze flicking over to Zoe’s still form.
“Go!” Ian shouted again. “Go! I’ll take care of Zoe! Get Lance and Drake!”
I nodded at him, then turned and ran through the open patio door, chasing after my enemies.
Chapter Sixteen
The door led out to a stone patio that overlooked a large heated pool. Dozens of kids splashed in the water, while others lounged around on chairs all around the pool, laughing, talking, texting, and drinking.
I ran over to the iron railing and scanned the crowd below, trying to figure out where Lance and Drake had gone.
There they were.
I spotted Lance on the far side of the pool, his phone against his ear, trying to worm his way through the crowd. He got stuck behind a group of giggling girls and glanced up at the patio, checking to see if anyone was following him. His eyes widened when he saw me standing there. No doubt Lance had been hoping that the chimeras had killed me and the others. He should have known better. I was a Spartan. It was going to take more than a few monsters to murder me.