the commander’s face twisted with pain, she drove her knee up into the side of his head.
It was so fast, so brutal, even the crowd didn’t know what the hell had happened until the commander was staggering back, and Aelin was dancing on her toes.
The commander laughed, straightening. It was the only break Aelin gave him before she went on the offensive.
She moved like a midnight storm. Whatever training she’d had in Wendlyn, whatever that prince had taught her … Gods help them all.
Punch after punch, block, lunge, duck, spin … The crowd was a writhing thing, foaming at the mouth at the swiftness, the skill.
Chaol had seen her kill. It had been a while since he’d seen her fight for the enjoyment of it.
And she was enjoying the hell out of this.
An opponent worthy of her, he supposed as she locked her legs around the commander’s head and rolled, flipping him.
Sand sprayed around them. She wound up on top, driving her fist down into the man’s cold, handsome face—
Only to be hurled off with a twist so swift that Chaol could hardly follow the movement. Aelin hit the bloodied sand and uncoiled to her feet just as the commander attacked once more.
Then they were again a blur of limbs and blows and darkness.
Across the pit, Arobynn was wide-eyed, grinning, a starving man before a feast. Lysandra clung to his side, her knuckles white as she gripped his arm. Men were whispering in Arobynn’s ear, their eyes locked on the pit, as hungry as Arobynn. Either the owners of the Pits or prospective clients, bargaining for the use of the woman fighting with such wild wrath and wicked delight.
Aelin landed a kick to the commander’s stomach that sent him slamming into the rock wall. He slumped, gasping for air. The crowd cheered, and Aelin flung out her arms, turning in a slow circle, Death triumphant.
The crowd’s answering roar made Chaol wonder if the ceiling would come crashing down.
The commander hurtled for her, and Aelin whirled, catching him and locking his arms and neck into a hold not easily broken. She looked at Arobynn, as if in question.
Her master glanced at the wide-eyed, ravenous men beside him—then nodded to her.
Chaol’s stomach turned over. Arobynn had seen enough. Proved enough.
It hadn’t even been a fair fight. Aelin had let it go on because Arobynn had wanted it to go on. And once she took out that clock tower and her magic was back … What checks would there be against her? Against Aedion, and that Fae Prince of hers, and all the warriors like them? A new world, yes. But a world in which the ordinary human voice would be nothing more than a whisper.
Aelin twisted the commander’s arms, and the demon shrieked in pain, and then—
Then Aelin was staggering back, clutching at her forearm, at the blood shining bright through the shred in her suit.
It was only when the commander whirled, blood slipping down his chin, his eyes pitch black, that Chaol understood. He’d bitten her. Chaol hissed through his teeth.
The commander licked his lips, his bloody grin growing. Even with the crowd, Chaol could hear the Valg demon say, “I know what you are now, you half-breed bitch.”
Aelin lowered the hand she’d clapped on her arm, blood shining on her dark glove. “Good thing I know what you are, too, prick.”
End it. She had to end it now.
“What’s your name?” she said, circling the demon commander.
The demon inside the man’s body chuckled. “You cannot pronounce it in your human tongue.” The voice skittered down Chaol’s veins, icing them.
“So condescending for a mere grunt,” she crooned.
“I should bring you down to Morath myself, half-breed, and see how much you talk then. See what you make of all the delicious things we do to your kind.”
Morath—Duke Perrington’s Keep. Chaol’s stomach turned leaden. That was where they brought the prisoners who weren’t executed. The ones who vanished in the night. To do the gods knew what with them.
Aelin didn’t give him time to say anything more, and Chaol again wished he could see her face, if only to know what the hell was going on in her head as she tackled the commander. She slammed his considerable weight into the sand and grabbed his head.
Crack went the commander’s neck.
Her hands lingering on either side of the demon’s face, Aelin stared at the empty eyes, at the open mouth. The crowd screamed its triumph.
Aelin panted, her shoulders hunched, and then she straightened, brushing the