fingers to it. “But your aim was off. You want to kill me, you will have to try harder than that. I won’t lie still, helpless like a baby.” He stared at me, taunting me with his words.
“You won’t get away with it. The Amazons will hunt you down.”
“Really? Seems to me if that were true, I wouldn’t be standing here now.”
We were both moving now, slowly sidestepping around an invisible circle. My breath was ragged and a mix of sweat and dust coated my body. I wanted to cough or spit, to get some of the dirt that had found its way inside my mouth out. But I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction. I followed his example and smiled too. “I’ll rectify that soon enough.”
He grunted. “Threats. You forget you aren’t the first Amazon to try and kill me . . . there was my mother. Left me in a trash pile, in the snow. I survived. I’ll continue to survive, and I’ll do everything I can to stop the Amazons from destroying any more sons.”
“As if the sons were the innocent ones. I lost my lieutenant to a son last fall and two others—teen girls. We weren’t targeting him. We didn’t even know he existed.”
“
One
. One son. Are you saying the Amazons have no bad within them? That the tribe is so perfect one of your kind couldn’t do what that one son did? Go out on her own?”
I snorted at his ignorance. “Amazons have structure. We follow the high council. It is what has kept us strong.”
He stopped and placed his hand on his forehead. Then he laughed.
Anger flickered inside me. I tightened my fingers on the rock.
He shook his head and then held up a hand. “Enough.”
But I wasn’t done and I certainly wasn’t going to let him dictate when I would be.
I fingered the stone. It was rough and jagged, as if it had broken off from a bigger mass rather than having been formed on its own, it edges worn off by erosion and time. I found the sharpest point. Then I lunged.
He grabbed me by the wrist and stared down at me, his dark eyes snapping. “I’m not giving you the baby. You need to accept that, and if I think you are close to finding that baby, or harming another infant, I will forget my job is only to watch and report.”
I swung my free fist.
He grabbed it too.
We stared at each other as if trapped in some kind of unwelcome dance. Then he jerked me toward him, twisted my arms behind my back, and lowered his face to mine.
My mouth opened to yell curses, but his lips were already over mine. Wisely he kept his tongue out of reach of my teeth. I snapped my jaws together and arched my body, trying to escape.
My inability to do so was infuriating.
I twisted my face to the side, the curses he’d stopped began flowing from my mouth, and I bucked my body against his. Somehow he moved my wrists to just one of his hands and reached into one of those pockets I’d worried about when he first arrived. Realizing he was going for something he intended to use against me, I slammed my foot down on the top of his. He grimaced but didn’t drop his hold. Instead he twisted toward me again, something silver shining in his hand.
A gun or a knife . . . I put everything I had into the struggle, forgot my pain, forgot everything but attaining freedom. I rammed my knee into his thigh over and over, turned toward him so my mouth was level with his shoulder, and bit down as hard and viciously as I could.
I was rewarded with the warm taste of blood through his T-shirt, but as quickly as the moment of success came, it was gone. There was a snap and cold metal closed around my wrists.
He shoved me to the ground.
I panted for breath, my mind whirling, wondering how with only my feet free, I could kill him.
It was little reward, but he was winded too. His chest heaved. He rubbed the back of his hand over his mouth as if scrubbing the area where our lips had touched.
Then he turned and headed off in a lope. Six feet away he stopped and called back. “Don’t be a sheep, Zery. Be headstrong and stupid if
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