his gear. So much for celebrating. Violating check-in wasn’t something the Andarion military took lightly. It was one of their strictest policies and held some of the worst punishments for anyone dumb enough to do it.
His rage mounting, he limped his way to a public transport and got in. He swiped his military ID and sat back while it drove him back to base.
Trying to keep his thoughts off what was waiting for him and the boiling anger over the injustice of it all, he watched the small monitor, and listened to the media commentator reviewing the night’s fight results.
“Talyn Batur is not only the youngest to ever win the title, but is the first Andarion in Ring history to take the Zoftiq title in both the Open and Vested leagues. We know the Iron Hammer is celebrating his unprecedented and historic victory tonight. Sources say that he was spotted in his dressing room with a number of beautiful females, all vying for the Hammer’s attention. And I’m sure he’s giving it to them, even as I report this.”
He snorted derisively at the announcer who continued to cover the fight highlights.
Wish I lived the life they think I do…
Honestly, Talyn felt just like he had the very first time he’d ever fought a match. Sick to his stomach. Aching. Tired. Wrung completely out. He’d won that night, too. Only there’d been no reporters to cover it. Rather, he’d walked home afterward, in the rain, to an empty, run-down apartment, and made himself a can of soup. Done his homework and tucked himself into bed before his mother came home and saw the bruises on his face that would have forced him to lie to her about what had caused them.
She’d have reamed him solid for daring to fight at that age. For that matter, she reamed him now after every match for being stupid enough to step into the Splatterdome. She couldn’t stand to see him hurt.
If only he had a choice about it.
“Nothing ever changes,” he breathed. Yet as he looked out at the Andarions on the street, he wanted it to.
Desperately.
All his life, he’d played by the rules. Done what he was supposed to, and got his teeth kicked in by everyone around him. Literally and figuratively.
He was done with it.
I just want to be normal. To have what other Andarions took for granted. Anonymity. Family.
A welcoming female in his bed.
Equitable job opportunity.
But those were all elusive bitches, who teased him to the brink of insanity.
Sighing, Talyn glanced down at his reset orders and wanted to give Ferrick the fatality fight he craved.
From the moment the royal-blooded Anatole had laid eyes on him, the colonel had hated Talyn for his lack-Vest caste. Like most everyone else Talyn had ever met, the bastard didn’t even try to hide it. He went for Talyn’s jugular with psychotic glee, as if it was his divine right to punish Talyn for only having a single maternal family bloodline.
Let it go.
Yet truthfully, he was tired of doing that, too. At this point, he was craving blood to a dangerous level.
Pulling out his link and needing a distraction from thoughts that were bound to get him arrested, he started gathering information on his next fight opponent.
Channel it, dumbass. That was what he was best at. While his mother might hate what he’d chosen to do with his life, fighting kept him semi-leashed and sane.
Most days, anyway.
Narrowing his eyes, he made himself pay attention to the words on his link. He was on the fighter stats page when an annoying ad popped up. As usual, he moved to close it. Until his gaze fell to the gentle face of an angel who seemed to be smiling for him, personally. While she wasn’t the most beautiful female he’d ever seen, there was something about her that called out to him. A soft, kind heart that was lacking in most.
Damn, she was…
Sweet. The kind of female who made a home worth fighting for. The kind who could lift a male’s spirits… along with a number of other things.
Time for change, Talyn. Time to take something for yourself.
He’d just won the biggest fight of his career. Had claimed a title very few ever did. Had done what no other Andarion had ever done… he’d won it in both leagues.
Vested and Open.
Just shy of his twentieth birthday.
Now, it was time he fought for the one thing that mattered most.