Spartan Heart (Mythos Academy: Colorado #1)

Ian wasn’t trying to kill his brother. Wound him, yes. But kill him, no. Despite everything that had happened between them, Ian was still trying to save his brother. At least from dying. Because that’s the kind of good guy he was.

The same couldn’t be said for Drake, who seemed determined to run his brother through with his sword the first chance he got. I just hoped that Ian would realize that it was him or Drake and that Drake wasn’t giving him a choice. That he wouldn’t be captured and put in prison and that there was only one way to end that kind of fight.

But for right now, I had my hands full with Lance. The other warrior’s speed was quickly deserting him, and he kept trying to raise the scepter to conjure more chimeras. Every time he lifted the scepter, I lashed out with my sword and forced him to drop his hand back down to his side or risk my chopping it off completely.

“What’s wrong, Lance?” I mocked. “You’re looking slow and weak. I thought Romans were faster than that. You’ve spent too much time partying and not enough time training. Your endurance sucks.”

“Shut up, Spartan,” Lance growled back. “I’ve still got plenty of energy left to kill you!”

He swung his sword at me again, but I ducked under the blow, came up, spun around, and sliced my blade across his back. Lance screamed and staggered forward. He managed to hang on to his sword, but the gold chimera scepter flew out of his hands, hit the floor, and rolled away. I charged after the artifact—

“Rory!” Babs’s hand moved under my mouth. “Over there!”

I stopped and looked to my right. While Ian and I had been fighting Drake and Lance, Covington had made a beeline for the display case. With everything that had been going on, I’d forgotten that he was a Roman and how fast he could move. He shoved his elbow into the glass, shattering it, then reached inside and grabbed the black jewelry box.

“Forget about them!” Covington screamed. “We got what we came for! Let’s go!”

Drake ducked Ian’s latest attack, put his shoulder down, and barreled into his brother. The move took Ian by surprise, and his legs flew out from under him. He hit the floor hard, and his head snapped back against the stone. Ian let out a low groan, and I could tell he was dazed. But instead of attacking him again, Drake kept right on going, running past his brother and scooping up the gold chimera scepter from the floor.

“Lance!” Drake yelled. “Let’s go!”

Covington was already sprinting toward the closest archway, and Drake fell into step behind him. Lance darted forward as well, but he didn’t follow the other Reapers. Instead, he veered off to the left, where Ian was still groaning and trying to shake off his hard fall. My breath caught in my throat, and I raced in that direction, moving faster than I ever had before.

Lance stopped right in front of Ian and raised his sword high. “Die, Viking!” he snarled.

“No!” I screamed.

Lance raised his sword even higher, then started to bring his weapon down on top of Ian’s head. I leaped forward, closing the distance between us, and thrust out with my own sword—shoving it straight into Lance’s heart.

His eyes bulged, and he screamed with pain. I yanked Babs free of his chest, making him scream again. Lance stood there, wobbling on his feet. He stared down at all the blood staining his chest, as though he couldn’t believe I’d actually gotten the best of him. Then his sword slipped from his hand, and he toppled to the floor—dead.

“Ian!” I turned to him. “Are you okay?”

He shook off the rest of his daze, took my outstretched arm, and let me pull him to his feet. “I’m fine! We can’t let them get away!”

My head snapped around just in time for me to see Covington and Drake vanish through the open archway. Ian and I headed after them, but we hadn’t taken three steps in that direction before Covington and Drake rushed right back into the rotunda. A second later, I realized why they’d changed course.

Zoe and Mateo were here.

The Amazon and the Roman stormed into the rotunda. Zoe was brandishing her electrodagger, while Mateo had his crossbow in his hand. The two of them charged after Covington and Drake, and Ian and I did the same thing.

“Give it up!” I yelled. “You’ve got nowhere to go!”

The Reapers didn’t pay any attention to me. Instead, Covington and Drake raced for the other archway on the far side of the rotunda.

“We can’t let them get away!” Ian yelled again.

The four of us chased after the two Reapers. Mateo pulled ahead of the rest of us, since his Roman speed made him the fastest. He snapped up his crossbow and fired off a bolt.

Thunk!

The bolt clipped Covington’s arm and slammed into the wall. The librarian yelped, and the sharp, stinging blow made him lose his grip on the jewelry box. The artifact clattered to the floor. Covington slowed down, like he was going to double back for it, but Drake shoved him forward. Covington cursed and kept running. So did Drake.

Ian stopped long enough to snatch the jewelry box up off the floor, and we all ran on.

The Reapers sprinted from one room to another, with us chasing after them. Covington’s Roman speed easily kept him in the lead, and Drake lagged a few feet behind him. Around and around we all went, from one exhibit area to another, until I almost felt like we were running laps of the dungeon section of the museum.

My gaze darted left and right, and I hoped that Takeda, Aunt Rachel, and the Protectorate guards would show up, but they didn’t appear. They must still be searching the exhibit rooms on the first floor. With our comms jammed, they probably had no idea what was going on up here, which meant it was up to me and my friends to stop the Reapers.

I was okay with that.

Covington and Drake darted into a room up ahead of us and disappeared from sight. We charged after them, and I realized that we were right back where we’d started, in the rotunda with the smashed display case and dead Reapers littering the floor.

I expected Covington and Drake to already be gone from this area, but to my surprise, the librarian was standing in the archway on the far side of the rotunda, bent over double, his hands on his knees, as if he’d run out of energy and couldn’t take another step. I didn’t believe that for one second.

Mateo was still ahead of Ian, Zoe, and me, and he increased his pace, determined to get to Covington before he escaped.

“Stop!” I yelled. “It’s a trap!”

Mateo charged ahead anyway, and Covington stepped back into the other room. Drake was in there as well, and he slashed his sword through the air at something I couldn’t see. A loud screech of metal rang out, and the spiked iron gate at the top of the archway dropped down. Drake must have hacked through the rope that was holding up the gate.

“Mateo! Watch out!” Ian shouted.