Magic folded in on me, chunks of the creature flying and slamming into me, as the beast tried to regenerate with me inside it. Plants and magic blinded me. I stomped, trying to find the flower by feel.
Pressure ground my chest. It hurt to breathe. I stomped again and again. Where the hell was it?
A hunk of metal smashed against my head, and the world’s biggest bell rang between my ears. My vision swam. I stomped in frantic frenzy. Something crunched under my foot. The pressure vanished. Pieces of the beast rained down around me.
I turned and saw Alessandro standing by the SUV, my tactical machete in his right hand and a metal ring with a severed plant stem hanging from it in his left. Nothing else moved.
We won. We took on an impossible fight and we won.
He dropped the ring and grinned at me, and I grinned back.
A body crashed through the skylight and landed between us. Nine feet tall, humanoid, with four arms and two sturdy legs, it was made of the same material as the beasts, but instead of the blunt head with glowing eyes, its face was a rotting human head. The skin had peeled off its cheekbones, frozen in time by the magic. Its lips were gone, and its teeth flashed a grotesque smirk. Two human eyes, charged with blue magic, glared at us.
I didn’t have enough magic to swing the sword.
A second sword, a narrow black blade, appeared in Alessandro’s left hand.
My magic brushed against a rudimentary intelligence. It felt muddled, undone, as if parts of it had rotted away, but it was there.
The creature turned toward Alessandro. Metal blades slid from the vegetation of its four arms.
It had a mind. Not much of one, but it was there.
“Feed it magic!” I hurled my blade over the beast.
Alessandro jumped, catching Linus’ sword in midair.
The magic of Primes manifested in different ways. For me, it was wings. Beautiful glowing wings, each long translucent feather dark green at the base lightening to a brilliant grass green, then turquoise, until the color burst into triumphant gold at the edge.
I opened my wings and sang out a long high note. Magic tore out of me. I only had enough for one blast, and I sank everything I had into it.
My magic seared the giant’s crippled mind.
The creature stopped in midstep.
I raised my hand and sang out, my voice an ethereal call suffused with power. “Come to me.”
The giant turned, took a step toward me, and dropped to its knees.
The world went black and fuzzy at the edges. Alessandro appeared above the creature, falling, Linus’ sword held over his head. The blade sliced through the air and bit into the giant’s head, splitting it in two. He bisected it all the way to the floor. The two halves sagged to opposite sides, and the ring with the bud hovered in midair. Alessandro reversed the cut and slashed across it in a classic diagonal strike. It was a beautiful move, smooth, fast, and precise.
The ring fell apart.
The top of the unopened flower fluttered to the ground. Its light faded and died.
The two halves of the beast collapsed, spilling vegetation and metal all over the floor. The remains of a human body, flesh still clinging to the bones, scattered across the tile. The stench of carrion hit me. I gagged. My head felt too heavy. Someone had poured lead into my skull when I wasn’t looking.
“Are you hurt?” I asked. Talking was very difficult for some reason.
“No.”
I tried to walk, but I wasn’t sure where the ground was. And then Alessandro was there, carrying me to the car.
“Put me down.”
“Shut up,” he said gently.
“You don’t have touching rights.”
“Right now I do.”
I couldn’t stop him if I’d tried. And being carried by him felt so nice. He was warm and strong, and after all that, somehow, he still smelled good. Being in his arms felt like nothing in this world could hurt me.
“Okay,” I said. “You can carry me to the car.”
“Thank you, Prime Baylor. That’s quite magnanimous of you.”
He opened Rhino’s passenger door and loaded me into the seat as if I were made of glass. The seat felt good, but his arms felt better.
He tilted my seat back and reached over me to buckle my seat belt.
“I’ve got it,” I ground out.
“Relax. I’m strapping you in.”
We were face-to-face, his arm around me. If I leaned forward an inch, I could brush my lips over his cheek. My body tried to respond. It had no energy left, but it tried so hard.
He buckled my seat belt.
“Sword,” I told him.
“I’ll get the sword.” He shut the door, ran to the pile of metal and plants, and came back with Linus’ blade and the four rings. He handed the sword to me, and I hugged it and exhaled.
Alessandro stuffed the rings into a canvas bag, climbed into the driver’s seat, started the armored SUV, and Rhino rolled forward. The walls of the dealership slid by and we emerged into the sunlight. Alessandro made a sharp left and Rhino sped onto the bridge we took to get here.
“Wrong way. Marat is the other way.”
“We’re not going to see Marat. We’re going to the hospital.”
A green construct leaped out of the water and landed on the bridge in front of us. Alessandro gunned it. The SUV smashed into the beast with a wet thunk at fifty miles per hour. Chunks of metal and bone flew apart. In the sideview mirror I saw them fall and remain still. He must’ve crushed the flower.
“I’m warming up to your pancake strategy,” he said.
My tongue felt slow and thick in my mouth. “We have to see Marat in twenty minutes.”
“He’ll wait.”
“No. It’s im . . . imp . . .”
“Important?”
“Imperative that we keep that appointment. It’s my first interview with them.”
“He will wait.”
“Turn around.”
“Catalina, your side is soaked with blood, your shirt has vomit on it, and your head is bleeding. If we go to see Marat right now, he won’t be impressed. Also, that sword burns through magic like a motherfucker, and when I find out who gave it to you, I’ll kill them, because that’s a death sentence.”
I raised my hand and touched my head. My fingers came away smudged with blood.
“It’s not deep,” Alessandro said. “But you need to be checked out.”
“Don’t take me to the hospital. I can’t afford to be the evening news.”
“Then I’ll take you home.”
“No, that’s worse. If we go home, I’ll never get out.”
“Of course you will.”
“They’ll swarm me. They will tie me to the bed and call an ambulance.”
His voice softened. He turned to glance at me. He looked so handsome. “Catalina, tesoro, please let me take you home.”
Oh my God. How was he even in my car?
“I know what you’re doing.”
He smiled at me and my heart made a little happy leap.
“You’re trying to charm me.”
He reached over, took my hand in his, and kissed my fingers. “Let’s go get you a doctor.”
“It doesn’t work on me.” It worked. It so worked.
“You need a doctor. We can go home, or we can go to the hospital. I’m driving and you’re not in a position to stop me.”
A low insistent ache pulsated in my head, growing stronger and stronger. Somewhere deep inside me a rational part of my brain informed me that he was right. I needed a doctor. But I needed to do the interview even more.
“Please stop the car.”
The muscles on his jaw bulged.
“I know you’re pissed off and my head is bleeding.”
“And your side. And you’re speaking slowly, which means you drained your magic down to nothing or you have a concussion.”